Erwin J, Morgan M, Britten N, Gray K, Peters B
Academic Department of Genitourinary Medicine, Guy's, King's and St Thomas's Medical School, Harrison Wing, St Thomas's Hospital, London SE1 7EH, UK.
Sex Transm Infect. 2002 Feb;78(1):37-9. doi: 10.1136/sti.78.1.37.
To examine factors associated with uptake of HIV clinic services by black African HIV positive people living in London.
Questionnaire survey of patients attending study clinic.
HIV outpatient clinic in south London, UK.
All HIV positive patients attending the clinic between July 1999 and March 2000.
Use of health services, delay in seeking HIV test, pre-HIV test concerns, delay in uptake of HIV care, barriers to clinic use, disclosure, sources of support.
392 questionnaires were completed. Respondents were 64% white, 26% black African, and 10% from other ethnic groups. Twenty eight per cent of black Africans suspected they were HIV positive before diagnosis (white patients 45% (p<0.01)). Before testing 11% of black Africans had previously attended a genitourinary medicine clinic, 80% had consulted a GP. Twenty per cent of black Africans expressed concern over entitlement to care and where to get an HIV test. The majority of black Africans (66%) received HIV care within 1 month of their diagnosis. They were significantly (p<0.01) less likely than white patients to disclose their HIV status to family and friends.
This study suggests that although black Africans are a high risk group for HIV infection they generally do not suspect their status. While they may delay testing, their uptake of HIV clinic care and use of statutory and voluntary support services after diagnosis is similar to their white counterparts. However, they lack informal support networks. This study highlights the continuing need for health promotion work among London's African communities, to reduce the stigma surrounding HIV/AIDS and to raise awareness of the benefits of testing.
调查居住在伦敦的非洲裔黑人HIV阳性患者接受HIV门诊服务的相关因素。
对就诊于研究诊所的患者进行问卷调查。
英国伦敦南部的HIV门诊。
1999年7月至2000年3月期间在该诊所就诊的所有HIV阳性患者。
医疗服务的使用情况、寻求HIV检测的延迟、HIV检测前的担忧、接受HIV治疗的延迟、就诊诊所的障碍、信息披露、支持来源。
共完成392份问卷。受访者中64%为白人,26%为非洲裔黑人,10%来自其他种族群体。28%的非洲裔黑人在确诊前怀疑自己感染了HIV(白人患者为45%,p<0.01)。在检测前,11%的非洲裔黑人曾就诊于泌尿生殖医学诊所,80%曾咨询过全科医生。20%的非洲裔黑人对获得治疗的权利以及何处进行HIV检测表示担忧。大多数非洲裔黑人(66%)在确诊后1个月内接受了HIV治疗。与白人患者相比,他们向家人和朋友披露HIV感染状况的可能性显著降低(p<0.01)。
本研究表明,尽管非洲裔黑人是HIV感染的高危人群,但他们通常不怀疑自己的感染状况。虽然他们可能会延迟检测,但确诊后他们接受HIV门诊治疗以及使用法定和志愿支持服务的情况与白人患者相似。然而,他们缺乏非正式的支持网络。本研究强调了在伦敦非洲社区持续开展健康促进工作的必要性,以减少围绕HIV/AIDS的耻辱感,并提高对检测益处的认识。