Benjarattanaporn P, Lindan C P, Mills S, Barclay J, Bennett A, Mugrditchian D, Mandel J S, Pongswatanakulsiri P, Warnnissorn T
AIDS Control and Prevention Project, Family Health International, Bangkok, Thailand.
AIDS. 1997 Sep;11 Suppl 1:S87-95.
To describe and identify predictors of health-care seeking behavior among men with sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in Bangkok, Thailand.
Cross-sectional survey.
Men presenting with STDs were recruited from government clinics (n = 101), private clinics (n = 50) and pharmacies (n = 62). They completed interviewer-administered questionnaires on risk behavior, patterns of treatment-seeking for current and past STDs and attitudes toward health care.
Two-thirds of all subjects had had a previous STD. Approximately one-half believed a partner other than a sex worker was the source of their current infection. Of the sample, 39% of men seen initially at drugstores, 29% at private clinics and 19% at government clinics sought subsequent treatment; failure to respond to therapy was the primary reason for seeking additional care. Men attending drugstores were likely to be younger, have less education and income, and to practice riskier sexual behavior. Patients at drugstores and general private clinics received the least amount of counseling or STD testing, while those attending specialized private STD clinics received the most comprehensive services. Attitudes towards government clinics were uniformly positive regardless of the site of enrollment; conversely, about 50% of clients at drugstores felt that the advice and treatment they received were inadequate. Convenience, affordability and lack of embarrassment were associated with choice of treatment site.
STD/HIV control in Thailand must focus on improved treatment and counseling at the point of first encounter in the health-care system, particularly in the private sector. Men may be dissuaded from attending government clinics because of lack of convenience. Syndromic case management, incorporation of STD care at other public clinics and the recognition that more men practice unsafe sex with partners other than sex workers could improve STD control.
描述并确定泰国曼谷患有性传播疾病(STD)的男性寻求医疗行为的预测因素。
横断面调查。
从政府诊所(n = 101)、私人诊所(n = 50)和药店(n = 62)招募患有性传播疾病的男性。他们完成了由访谈员管理的关于风险行为、当前和过去性传播疾病的治疗寻求模式以及对医疗保健态度的问卷。
所有受试者中有三分之二曾患过性传播疾病。约一半的人认为除性工作者之外的伴侣是其当前感染的源头。在样本中,最初在药店就诊的男性中有39%、在私人诊所就诊的有29%、在政府诊所就诊的有19%寻求后续治疗;治疗无反应是寻求额外治疗的主要原因。在药店就诊的男性可能更年轻,教育程度和收入较低,且性行为风险更高。在药店和普通私人诊所就诊的患者接受的咨询或性传播疾病检测最少,而在专门的私人性传播疾病诊所就诊的患者接受的服务最全面。无论登记地点如何,对政府诊所的态度总体上是积极的;相反,约50%在药店就诊的患者认为他们得到的建议和治疗不足。便利性、可承受性和不尴尬与治疗地点的选择有关。
泰国的性传播疾病/艾滋病控制必须侧重于在医疗保健系统的首次接触点改善治疗和咨询,尤其是在私营部门。由于不方便,男性可能不愿前往政府诊所就诊。症状病例管理、将性传播疾病护理纳入其他公共诊所,以及认识到更多男性与性工作者之外的伴侣进行不安全的性行为,可能会改善性传播疾病的控制。