The provider perception inventory: psychometrics of a scale designed to measure provider stigma about HIV, substance abuse, and MSM behavior.

Liliane C Windsor, Ellen Benoit, Geoffrey L Ream, Brad Forenza
Author Information
  1. Liliane C Windsor: School of Social Work, Rutgers: The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, USA. lwindsor@ssw.rutgers.edu

Abstract

Nongay identified men who have sex with men and women (NGI MSMW) and who use alcohol and other drugs are a vulnerable, understudied, and undertreated population. Little is known about the stigma faced by this population or about the way that health service providers view and serve these stigmatized clients. The provider perception inventory (PPI) is a 39-item scale that measures health services providers' stigma about HIV/AIDS, substance use, and MSM behavior. The PPI is unique in that it was developed to include service provider stigma targeted at NGI MSMW individuals. PPI was developed through a mixed methods approach. Items were developed based on existing measures and findings from focus groups with 18 HIV and substance abuse treatment providers. Exploratory factor analysis using data from 212 health service providers yielded a two dimensional scale: (1) individual attitudes (19 items) and (2) agency environment (11 items). Structural equation modeling analysis supported the scale's predictive validity (N=190 sufficiently complete cases). Overall findings indicate initial support for the psychometrics of the PPI as a measure of service provider stigma pertaining to the intersection of HIV/AIDS, substance use, and MSM behavior. Limitations and implications to future research are discussed.

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Grants

  1. R03 DA024997/NIDA NIH HHS
  2. R03 DA024997-D2S1/NIDA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Bisexuality
Female
Focus Groups
HIV Infections
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health Personnel
Homosexuality, Male
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Perception
Pilot Projects
Psychometrics
Stereotyping
Substance-Related Disorders
United States

Word Cloud

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