HIV Testing and Care Guidance

Confidential HIV testing in Miami-Dade with clear answers, prevention support, and the right next step.

Knowing your HIV status gives you power over your health. HIV can affect people of any age, background, sex, or orientation — and the only way to know your status is to get tested.

At Inmuhealth, we provide confidential HIV testing, result review, prevention guidance, and follow-up support for patients in Miami-Dade and South Florida.

Whether you need routine HIV screening, had a recent possible exposure, want to learn about PrEP or PEP, or received a result that needs follow-up, our team is here to help you understand your options and take the next step with privacy, respect, and clarity.

Smile.

Your path to a healthier
tomorrow begins today.

HIV testing starts with clarity.

HIV testing is not only for people with symptoms. Many people with HIV may not feel sick for years, and early testing helps patients get care sooner, protect their health, and prevent transmission.

CDC recommends that everyone between ages 13 and 64 get tested for HIV at least once as part of routine healthcare. People with certain risk factors may need testing more often.

At Inmuhealth, HIV testing is handled confidentially, without judgment, and with clear guidance about what your result means.

HIV care and prevention support may include:

Confidential HIV testing

Private HIV testing for patients who need routine screening, have a possible exposure, want peace of mind, or need testing as part of broader infectious disease care.

Result review and next-step guidance

We explain your results clearly and help you understand what may be needed next — whether your result is negative, positive, or requires additional follow-up testing.

PrEP education and prevention support

PrEP is a prevention option for people who are HIV-negative and want additional protection against HIV. Our team can help explain whether PrEP may be appropriate and what testing or follow-up may be needed.

PEP guidance after possible exposure

PEP is emergency HIV prevention after a possible exposure. It must be started as soon as possible and no later than 72 hours after exposure. If you think you may have been exposed to HIV, do not wait.

STD and hepatitis testing coordination

HIV testing is often connected with other preventive testing, including STD testing, hepatitis C testing, and related lab work depending on your situation.

Linkage to care and follow-up support

If HIV care, treatment, specialty care, case management, or additional services are needed, our team helps guide you toward the right next step.

Why HIV testing matters

HIV is treatable. With proper medical care and consistent treatment, people with HIV can live long, healthy lives.

Treatment also protects others. People with HIV who take HIV medicine as prescribed and maintain an undetectable viral load do not sexually transmit HIV. This is often known as Undetectable = Untransmittable, or U=U.

That is why testing, early diagnosis, treatment connection, and ongoing follow-up are so important.

Testing gives you answers. Follow-up gives you direction.

When should you get tested for HIV?

You should consider HIV testing if:

You have never been tested before

Everyone should know their HIV status at least once as part of routine healthcare.

You have had a possible exposure

This may include unprotected sex, a condom break, shared needles or injection equipment, or a partner with HIV or unknown HIV status.

You have a new partner or multiple partners

Testing helps protect your health and gives both partners clearer information.

You were diagnosed with an STD, hepatitis, or tuberculosis

Some infections can increase the importance of HIV testing and follow-up.

You are pregnant or planning pregnancy

HIV testing during pregnancy helps protect both mother and baby by allowing early treatment when needed.

You want prevention options

If you are HIV-negative and want additional protection, testing is the first step before discussing PrEP or other prevention strategies.

HIV, PrEP, and PEP: know the difference.

HIV testing

HIV testing tells you your current HIV status and helps determine the right next step.

PrEP

PrEP is ongoing HIV prevention for people who are HIV-negative and want additional protection before possible exposure.

PEP

PEP is emergency HIV prevention after a possible exposure. It is time-sensitive and must be started within 72 hours.

If you are unsure which one you need, start with a confidential visit. We can help you understand the difference and guide you correctly.

Do not guess. Know your status.

If you have questions about HIV testing, prevention, exposure, symptoms, PrEP, PEP, or follow-up care, Inmuhealth can help you start with a clear and confidential conversation.

You leave with more than a test result — you leave with answers, guidance, and a clearer next step.

Care that fits
real life.

Serving patients throughout South Florida.

Whether it’s your child’s first visit or ongoing care for your family, you’ll feel cared for here.

Start here.

Whatever you need—a check-up, guidance, or testing—you can start here and take the next step with confidence.

Experience discreet care you can trust.

Schedule your confidential appointment.