STD/HIV prevention practices among primary care clinicians: risk assessment, prevention counseling, and testing.

Daniel E Montaño, William R Phillips, Danuta Kasprzyk, April Greek
Author Information
  1. Daniel E Montaño: Battelle Centers for Public Health Research and Evaluation, Seattle, Washington 98109-3598, USA. montano@battelle.org

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe current practices of primary care (PC) clinicians for STD/HIV control services: risk assessment, prevention counseling, and offering tests.
STUDY DESIGN: We identified clinical strategies through qualitative interviews. We then surveyed by mail a random sample of Washington State family physicians, general internists, obstetrician-gynecologists, nurse practitioners, and certified nurse midwives. We identified characteristics of clinicians and their practices associated with each strategy and universal provision of each service.
RESULTS: We report on 519 clinicians (80% adjusted response rate). Clinicians provided services to selected patients they considered high risk. Universal practices were less common: risk assessment (56%), prevention counseling (60%), STD tests (30%), and HIV tests (19%). Universal services were more common among nurses, those recently trained, and those seeing more STD patients.
CONCLUSION: Different types of PC clinicians use widely differing clinical strategies and many use selective rather than universal approaches to STD/HIV control services. Further research is needed to develop tailored interventions to improve provision of these services.

Grants

  1. R24 HD042828/NICHD NIH HHS
  2. R24 HD042828-10/NICHD NIH HHS
  3. 5 R01 MH52997-04/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
Attitude of Health Personnel
Humans
Logistic Models
Nurse Midwives
Nurse Practitioners
Obstetrics
Physicians, Family
Primary Health Care
Primary Prevention
Risk Assessment
Sex Counseling
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Surveys and Questionnaires
Washington

Word Cloud

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