When risk is low: primary care physicians' counseling about HIV prevention.

Paul Haidet, David A Stone, William C Taylor, Harvey J Makadon
Author Information
  1. Paul Haidet: General Medicine Section, Houston Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 2002 Holcombe Boulevard (152), Houston, TX, 77030, USA. phaidet@bcm.tmc.edu

Abstract

To explore the conceptualization of risk by primary care physicians about behaviors associated with a relatively low risk of HIV transmission, we performed open-ended telephone interviews with 59 primary care physicians throughout the United States. During the interviews, physicians were asked to respond to a series of clinical vignettes presenting situations where the risk of HIV transmission is relatively low or unknown. We performed a qualitative content analysis of physicians' responses to these clinical vignettes. We found that relatively few information-gathering statements were made in an effort to elicit the patient's perspective regarding risk, and that risk counseling by physicians often followed an 'all or nothing' heuristic that manifested itself as the advice to take maximum precautions under situations of any perceived risk, no matter how small. In addition, HIV testing was often incompletely explained. When combined with the all or nothing heuristic, this created advice that was potentially harmful by using testing as a means to achieve zero risk and forgo protective strategies in settings where patients may potentially be in the HIV negative 'window' phase of infection.

MeSH Term

AIDS Serodiagnosis
Boston
Counseling
Female
HIV Infections
Health Services Research
Humans
Male
Physicians, Family
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Risk Assessment

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0riskHIVphysiciansprimarycarerelativelylowtransmissionperformedinterviewsclinicalvignettessituationsphysicians'counselingoftenheuristicadvicetestingpotentiallyexploreconceptualizationbehaviorsassociatedopen-endedtelephone59throughoutUnitedStatesaskedrespondseriespresentingunknownqualitativecontentanalysisresponsesfoundinformation-gatheringstatementsmadeeffortelicitpatient'sperspectiveregardingfollowed'allnothing'manifestedtakemaximumprecautionsperceivedmattersmalladditionincompletelyexplainedcombinednothingcreatedharmfulusingmeansachievezeroforgoprotectivestrategiessettingspatientsmaynegative'window'phaseinfectionlow:prevention

Similar Articles

Cited By (1)