Willingness to treat HIV-positive patients at different stages of medical education and experience. NLM AIDSLINE Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 2000. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.

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Willingness to treat HIV-positive patients at different stages of medical education and experience.

AIDS Patient Care STDS. 1999 Jul;13(7):403-14. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE MED/20328680
Radecki S; Shapiro J; Thrupp LD; Gandhi SM; Sangha SS; Miller RB; Pacific AIDS Education and Training Center, University of; Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, USA.; sradecki@hsc.usc.edu


Abstract: The willingness of physicians to provide care to HIV-positive patients has been linked to a number of attitudinal factors, but little is known concerning the impact of premedical, medical, and residency training on these factors. The purpose of this study is to elicit responses to the same series of questions concerning HIV and its treatment from respondents at different stages of training, to detect trends in attitudes and to measure the impact of those attitudes on willingness to provide care for HIV/AIDS patients. Study data come from a cross-sectional survey (n = 249) of respondents across the training continuum, from premedical students to faculty physicians, using a self-administered questionnaire at a single medical school. The response rate was 59.6%. The study showed significant decreases in personal fear and misgivings concerning HIV, coupled with a substantial decrease in the perceived need for testing of non-high-risk individuals, as respondents gained additional education and training. Overall, the intent to treat HIV did not change significantly by training level, but multivariate analyses showed that while the initially strong influence of attitudes toward AIDS and its attendant risks diminishes, comfort relative to being around homosexuals per se continues to exert an impact on the intent to treat. Appropriate use of protective measures when providing care becomes far more common once individuals enter their clinical training years. The impact of medical education through its entire continuum therefore shows a positive impact on attitudes toward HIV, despite the absence of a significant trend in respondents' stated intent to treat. However, negative attitudes toward homosexuals continue to exert a negative influence on intent to treat that endures into the clinical training years.
Keywords: JOURNAL ARTICLE *Attitude of Health Personnel California Confidence Intervals Cross-Sectional Studies Education, Medical, Undergraduate Female Health Care Surveys Human HIV Infections/*THERAPY HIV Seropositivity Internship and Residency *Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Male Medical Staff, Hospital Odds Ratio Severity of Illness IndexKWDjournalarticleKWDattitudeofhealthpersonnelcaliforniaconfidenceintervalscross-sectionalstudieseducation,medical,undergraduatefemalehealthcaresurveyshumanhivinfections/KWDtherapyhivseropositivityinternshipandresidencyKWDknowledge,attitudes,practicemalemedicalstaff,hospitaloddsratioseverityofillnessindex
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