Literature DB >> 21033534

Patterns of HIV testing among Ontario physicians.

Claudia Rank1, Robert S Remis, Carol Swantee, Keyi Wu.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: HIV testing is important for HIV prevention and control. Nevertheless, approximately 35% of HIV infections in Ontario remain undiagnosed. We examined patterns of HIV testing among physicians to determine provider-related factors associated with HIV testing in Ontario.
METHODS: Providers identified from HIV test requisitions submitted to the Ontario Public Health Laboratory in 2006 were linked to a database of Ontario physicians using probabilistic matching. We examined HIV testing frequency by demographic characteristics and physician specialty. In multivariate logistic regression, we assessed factors associated with high testing frequency (20+ tests).
RESULTS: 12,477 physicians (59.3% of Ontario physicians) prescribed at least one HIV test in 2006; the proportion was highest in Central East/other (72.4%) and Northern (69.4%) regions compared to others (53.7-58.7%), and highest among the most recent graduates (68.4% versus 59.0% among earlier graduates). A substantial proportion of physicians in family medicine/general practice (83.6%), obstetrics/gynecology (82.1%) and internal medicine (47.7%) prescribed HIV testing. Overall, most physicians (67.5%) prescribed fewer than 20 tests. High testing frequency was significantly associated with practice in Toronto (AOR 2.95), Central East/other (AOR 2.02), or Ottawa region (AOR 2.28), and specialty in family medicine/general practice (AOR 11.47), obstetrics/gynecology (AOR 6.31) or internal medicine (AOR 1.37). Physician sex and graduation country were not associated with high testing in multivariate regression. Of 361,609 tests, 1,048 (0.29%) were HIV-positive; 436 physicians (3.5%) had at least one HIV-positive result.
CONCLUSION: HIV testing among Ontario physicians varied substantially by health region, graduation year and specialty. These factors should be considered when delivering continuing medical education on HIV testing.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21033534

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Public Health        ISSN: 0008-4263


  4 in total

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2.  Factors associated with recent HIV testing among younger gay and bisexual men in New Zealand, 2006-2011.

Authors:  Nathan J Lachowsky; Peter J W Saxton; Nigel P Dickson; Anthony J Hughes; Alastair J S Summerlee; Cate E Dewey
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2014-03-31       Impact factor: 3.295

3.  Assessing uptake of national HIV screening and testing guidance-Part 1: Awareness, use and usefulness.

Authors:  G P Traversy; T Austin; J Yau; K Timmerman
Journal:  Can Commun Dis Rep       Date:  2017-12-07

4.  Assessing uptake of national HIV screening and testing guidance-Part 2: Knowledge, comfort and practice.

Authors:  G P Traversy; T Austin; J Yau; K Timmerman
Journal:  Can Commun Dis Rep       Date:  2017-12-07
  4 in total

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