Poznansky M C, Walters J, Cruikshank A, Pollock R, Dendrowskyj P, Lewis K, Parry J V, Fothergill J, Weber J
Department of Accident and Emergency Medicine, St Mary's Hospital, London.
J Accid Emerg Med. 1996 Nov;13(6):424-5. doi: 10.1136/emj.13.6.424.
The recently published findings of the unlinked anonymous HIV prevalence study in England and Wales showed unchanging HIV prevalence in groups such as homo/bisexual men, and declining rates in non-injecting heterosexual men attending genitourinary medicine clinics. However, this multicentre study did detect a significant rise in seroprevalence rates in pregnant women in England and Wales and sentinel groups within hospitals in London, warning that changing patterns of HIV infection might account for these variable results. In 1992-1993 a seroprevalence study of adult patients attending the accident and emergency department at St. Mary's Hospital in West Central London showed a rate of HIV-1 infection of 1 in 77. We have repeated the seroprevalence study over the same calendar months in 1994-1995 to gain further information about HIV positive patients attending the department and to see whether a change in the patterns of HIV infection in the population served by St Mary's Hospital had occurred.
近期公布的英格兰和威尔士非关联匿名艾滋病毒流行率研究结果显示,男同性恋/双性恋男性等群体的艾滋病毒流行率保持不变,而去泌尿生殖医学诊所就诊的非注射吸毒异性恋男性的感染率有所下降。然而,这项多中心研究确实发现,英格兰和威尔士孕妇以及伦敦医院的哨点人群的血清阳性率显著上升,并警告称,艾滋病毒感染模式的变化可能是这些不同结果的原因。1992年至1993年,对伦敦市中心西部圣玛丽医院急诊科成年患者进行的血清阳性率研究显示,艾滋病毒-1感染率为1/77。我们在1994年至1995年的相同日历月份重复了血清阳性率研究,以获取更多关于到该科室就诊的艾滋病毒阳性患者的信息,并了解圣玛丽医院所服务人群中艾滋病毒感染模式是否发生了变化。