Gerbert B, Bronstone A, McPhee S, Pantilat S, Allerton M
Division of Behavioral Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of California, San Francisco 94111, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 1998 Aug;15(2):103-13. doi: 10.1016/s0749-3797(98)00025-7.
To develop and test a brief, reliable, and valid HIV-risk screening instrument for use in primary health care settings.
A two-phase study: (1) developing a self-administered HIV-risk screening instrument, and (2) testing it with a primary care population, including testing the effect of confidentiality on disclosure of HIV-risk behaviors.
Phase 1: 3 types of sites (a blood donor center, a methadone clinic, and 2 STD clinics) representing low and high HIV-seroprevalence rates. Phase 2: 4 primary care sites.
Phase 1: 293 consecutively recruited participants. Phase 2: 459 randomly recruited primary care patients.
Phase 1: comparison of the responses of participants from low and high HIV-seroprevalence sites. Phase 2: primary care patients' rates of disclosure of HIV-risk behaviors and ratings of acceptability.
Phase 1: through examining item-confirmation rates, item-total correlations, and comparison of responses from low and high HIV-seroprevalence sites, we developed a final 10-item HIV-risk Screening Instrument (HSI) with an internal consistency coefficient of .73. Phase 2: 76% of primary care patients disclosed at least 1 risky behavior and 52% disclosed 2 or more risky behaviors. Patients were willing to disclose HIV-risk behaviors even knowing that their physician would see this information. Ninety-five percent of our patient participants were comfortable with the questions on the HSI, 78% felt it was important that their doctor know their answers, and 52% wished to discuss their answers with their physician.
Our brief, self-administered HSI is a reliable and valid measure. The HSI can be used in health care settings to identify individuals at risk for HIV and to initiate HIV testing, early care, and risk-reduction counseling, necessary goals for effective HIV prevention efforts.
开发并测试一种用于初级卫生保健机构的简短、可靠且有效的HIV风险筛查工具。
一项两阶段研究:(1)开发一种自我管理的HIV风险筛查工具,(2)在初级保健人群中进行测试,包括测试保密对HIV风险行为披露的影响。
第一阶段:3种类型的场所(一个献血中心、一个美沙酮诊所和2个性病诊所),代表低和高HIV血清流行率。第二阶段:4个初级保健场所。
第一阶段:连续招募293名参与者。第二阶段:随机招募459名初级保健患者。
第一阶段:比较低和高HIV血清流行率场所参与者的反应。第二阶段:初级保健患者HIV风险行为的披露率和可接受性评分。
第一阶段:通过检查项目确认率、项目与总分的相关性以及低和高HIV血清流行率场所参与者反应的比较,我们开发了最终的10项HIV风险筛查工具(HSI),其内部一致性系数为0.73。第二阶段:76%的初级保健患者披露了至少1种风险行为,52%披露了2种或更多风险行为。即使知道医生会看到这些信息,患者也愿意披露HIV风险行为。95%的患者参与者对HSI上的问题感到满意,78%认为医生知道他们的答案很重要,52%希望与医生讨论他们的答案。
我们简短的自我管理HSI是一种可靠且有效的测量工具。HSI可用于卫生保健机构,以识别有HIV风险的个体,并启动HIV检测、早期护理和降低风险咨询,这些是有效HIV预防工作的必要目标。