Milne R I, Keen S M
Department of Community Medicine, East Berkshire Health Authority, Windsor, Berkshire.
Br Med J (Clin Res Ed). 1988 Feb 20;296(6621):533-5. doi: 10.1136/bmj.296.6621.533.
General practitioners are excellently placed to assess a person's risk of being infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and to give advice on reducing that risk. Their attitudes to the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and infection with HIV are, however, unknown. A questionnaire survey of 196 general practitioners in East Berkshire Health District was used to assess general practitioners' readiness to undertake opportunistic health education to prevent the spread of infection with HIV. Altogether 132 replied. Sixty four of them expressed little interest in health education about HIV, and one in six would not dissent from the notion that AIDS could be controlled only by criminalising homosexuality. Only 75 of them had initiated discussions about HIV with patients. Moreover, many underestimated the risks from heterosexual sex while exaggerating the risks from non-sexual contact. Advice from general practitioners if given extensively might reduce the spread of infection with HIV. How best this may be achieved needs to be considered urgently.
全科医生在评估一个人感染人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的风险以及提供降低该风险的建议方面具有得天独厚的条件。然而,他们对获得性免疫缺陷综合征(艾滋病)和HIV感染的态度尚不清楚。对东伯克希尔健康区的196名全科医生进行了问卷调查,以评估全科医生开展机会性健康教育以预防HIV感染传播的意愿。共有132人回复。其中64人对HIV健康教育兴趣不大,六分之一的人不会反对艾滋病只能通过将同性恋定为犯罪来控制这一观点。他们中只有75人曾与患者展开过关于HIV的讨论。此外,许多人低估了异性性行为的风险,同时夸大了非性接触的风险。如果广泛提供全科医生的建议,可能会减少HIV感染的传播。如何才能最好地实现这一点需要紧急加以考虑。