Medical and dental students' attitudes about the AIDS epidemic. NLM AIDSLINE Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1991. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.

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Medical and dental students' attitudes about the AIDS epidemic.

Acad Med. 1990 Jul;65(7):458-60. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE MED/91054746
Bernstein CA; Rabkin JG; Wolland H; Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York,; NY.


Abstract: This study investigated changes, over a one-year period, in medical and dental students' attitudes toward various issues related to contact with AIDS patients. In 1988 and 1989, the authors surveyed second- and third-year medical and dental students at one medical school both before and after they completed a year of required clinical training. The dental students remained consistently more anxious and more restrictive in their attitudes toward treating patients with AIDS than did their medical student counterparts, and became more conservative (fearful) in their attitudes after working with AIDS patients, whereas the medical students became more liberal. Overall, both groups were more concerned about contracting AIDS in their professional lives than in their personal lives. Over one-third of the medical students and two-thirds of the dental students indicated that they did not wish to train in a specialty or hospital with a high percentage of AIDS patients, and a substantial minority of the students in both groups did not feel that they were responsible for treating all patients whom they were qualified to treat. These and related results suggest that AIDS-related anxiety may influence students' career choices and behaviors and the quality of care patients receive. Suggestions for educational strategies to address students' fears--both warranted and unwarranted--and the differences in attitudes between students of different health-care professions are discussed.
Keywords: *Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/EPIDEMIOLOGY Anxiety *Attitude of Health Personnel Attitude to Health Career Choice Clinical Clerkship Comparative Study *Disease Outbreaks Female Human Male New England Occupational Diseases/PSYCHOLOGY Specialties, Medical Students, Dental/*PSYCHOLOGY Students, Medical/*PSYCHOLOGY JOURNAL ARTICLEKWDacquiredimmunodeficiencysyndrome/epidemiologyanxietyKWDattitudeofhealthpersonnelattitudetohealthcareerchoiceclinicalclerkshipcomparativestudyKWDdiseaseoutbreaksfemalehumanmalenewenglandoccupationaldiseases/psychologyspecialties,medicalstudents,dental/KWDpsychologystudents,medical/KWDpsychologyjournalarticle
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Copyright © 1991 - National Library of Medicine. Reproduced under license with the National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD.

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