| Literature DB >> 30545370 |
Peipei Zhao1, Bolin Cao2, Cedric H Bien-Gund3, Weiming Tang3,4, Jason J Ong5,6, Yi Ding1, Weiying Chen1, Joseph D Tucker7,8,9, Zhenzhou Luo10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Men who have sex with men (MSM) are at high risk of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and sexually transmitted infection (STI) in China. Inadequate clinical services and poor clinical competency among physicians are major barriers to improving the sexual health of MSM. This study aims to understand physician clinical competency in providing MSM health services in China.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical services; HIV care continuum, HIV/STI testing; Men who have sex with men
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30545370 PMCID: PMC6293610 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3781-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Demographic characteristics of physicians who saw at least one male STI patient, 2017 (N = 501)
| Characteristics | Total | |
|---|---|---|
|
| % | |
| Age (years) | Mean: 37.6 ± 8.2; Min: 23; Max: 76 | |
| ≤30 | 110 | 22.0% |
| 31–40 | 244 | 48.7% |
| > 40 | 147 | 29.3% |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 376 | 75.0% |
| Female | 125 | 25.0% |
| Education | ||
| Associate’s degreea | 36 | 7.2% |
| Bachelor’s degree | 198 | 39.5% |
| Master’s degree | 216 | 43.1% |
| PhD degree | 51 | 10.2% |
| Specialty | ||
| Dermatovenerology | 166 | 33.1% |
| Urology | 151 | 30.1% |
| General medicineb | 72 | 14.4% |
| Proctology | 41 | 8.2% |
| Othersc | 37 | 7.4% |
| Infectious disease | 34 | 6.8% |
| Level of care | ||
| Primary | 34 | 6.8% |
| Secondary | 145 | 28.9% |
| Tertiary | 322 | 64.3% |
| Type of Medical institute | ||
| Public | 449 | 89.6% |
| Private | 52 | 10.4% |
| Proctoscope or anoscope available | ||
| Yes | 403 | 80.4% |
| No | 98 | 19.6% |
| Free condom and lubricants available | ||
| Yes | 260 | 51.9% |
| No | 241 | 48.1% |
| STI prevention pamphlets or educational materials available | ||
| Yes | 377 | 75.2% |
| No | 124 | 24.8% |
| Had seen MSM STI patients in the last 12 months | ||
| Yes | 267 | 53.3% |
| No | 234 | 46.7% |
| Asked about sex with other men when seeing last patient | ||
| Yes | 378 | 75.4% |
| No | 123 | 24.6% |
| Ask about anal sex when seeing last patient | ||
| Yes | 277 | 55.3% |
| No | 224 | 44.7% |
| Recommended STI testingd when seeing last patient | ||
| Yes | 455 | 90.8% |
| No | 46 | 9.2% |
aAssociate’s degree is usually earned in two years or more and can be attained at community colleges, technical colleges, vocational schools, and some colleges;
bGeneral medicine includes internal medicine, pediatrics and general practice;
cOthers include Reproductive Medicine, Andrology, Emergence clinic, Hematology, Professional Health, AIDS Prevention Office;
dSTI testing means both HIV testing and Syphilis testing
Physicians’ attitudes towards male homosexuals in China, 2017 (N = 267)
| Positive Attitudes | Neutral Attitudes | Negative Attitudes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Statements | |||
| Overall | 158(59.2%) | 78(29.2%) | 31(11.6%) |
| Male homosexuals are disgusting | 60(22.5%) | 180(67.4%) | 37(10.1%) |
| Male homosexuality is a perversion | 77(28.8%) | 166(62.2%) | 24(9.0%) |
| Homosexual behavior between two men is just plain wrong | 73(27.3%) | 155(58.1%) | 39(14.6%) |
| Male homosexuality is merely a different kind of lifestyle that should not be condemned | 113(42.3%) | 124(46.5%) | 30(11.2%) |
| Male homosexuals should be segregated by society (residential segregation; occupational segregation) | 147(55.1%) | 113(42.3%) | 7(2.6%) |
Factors associated with being a MSM-competent physician in China, 2017 (N = 267)
| Overalla ( | MSM-competent physicians ( | Non MSM-competent physicians ( | OR (95%CI) | aORb (95%CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | |||||
| ≤30 | 55(20.6%) | 27(16.8%) | 28(26.4%) | Ref | |
| 30–44 | 127(47.6%) | 79(49.1%) | 48(45.3%) | 1.71(0.90–3.23) | |
| > 44 | 85(31.8%) | 55(34.2%) | 30(28.3%) | 1.90(0.95–3.79) | |
| Sex | |||||
| Male | 195(73.0%) | 121(75.2%) | 74(69.8%) | 1.31(0.76–2.26) | |
| Female | 72(27.0%) | 40(24.8%) | 32(30.2%) | Ref | |
| Education | |||||
| Associate’s degreec | 15(5.6%) | 10(6.2%) | 5(4.7%) | 2.00(0.56–7.10) | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 98(36.7%) | 62(38.5%) | 36(34.0%) | 1.72(0.78–3.79) | |
| Master’s degree | 120(44.9%) | 72(44.7%) | 48(45.3%) | 1.50(0.70–3.22) | |
| PhD degree | 34(12.7%) | 17(10.6%) | 17(16.0%) | Ref | |
| Specialty | |||||
| Dermatovenerology | 109(40.8%) | 65(40.4%) | 44(42.3%) | 1.85(0.47–7.26) | |
| Urology | 63(23.6%) | 41(25.5%) | 22(20.8%) | 2.33(0.57–9.57) | |
| Proctology | 27(10.1%) | 19(11.8%) | 8(7.5%) | 2.97(0.63–14.03) | |
| General medicined | 38(14.2%) | 16(9.9%) | 22(20.8%) | 0.91(0.21–3.93) | |
| Infectious Disease | 21(7.9%) | 16(9.9%) | 5(4.7%) | 4.00(0.77–20.92) | |
| Otherse | 9(3.4%) | 4(2.5%) | 5(4.7%) | Ref | |
| Level of care | |||||
| Primary | 13(4.9%) | 8(5.0%) | 5(4.7%) | Ref | |
| Secondary | 65(24.3%) | 33(20.5%) | 32(30.2%) | 0.65(0.19–2.18) | |
| Tertiary | 189(70.8%) | 120(74.5%) | 69(65.1%) | 1.09(0.34–3.45) | |
| Type of Medical institute | |||||
| Public | 238(89.1%) | 145(90.1%) | 93(87.7%) | 1.27(0.58–2.76) | |
| Private | 29(10.9%) | 16(9.9%) | 13(12.3%) | Ref | |
| Proctoscope or anoscope available | |||||
| Yes | 219(82.0%) | 138(85.7%) | 81(76.4%) | 1.85(0.99–3.47) | |
| No | 48(18.0%) | 23(14.3%) | 25(23.6%) | Ref | |
| Free condom and lubricants available | |||||
| Yes | 150(56.2%) | 101(62.7%) | 49(46.2%) | 1.96(1.19–3.22)** | 2.01(1.21–3.34)** |
| No | 117(43.8%) | 60(37.3%) | 57(53.8%) | Ref | Ref |
| STI prevention pamphlets or educational materials available | |||||
| Yes | 208(77.9%) | 138(85.7%) | 70(66.0%) | 3.09(1.70–5.61)*** | 3.10(1.68–5.73)*** |
| No | 59(22.1%) | 23(14.3%) | 36(34.0%) | Ref | Ref |
| Interested in having medical institution name on the public clinic list capable of serving MSM | |||||
| Yes | 174(65.2%) | 113(70.2%) | 61(57.5%) | 1.74(1.04–2.90)* | 1.70(1.01–2.86)* |
| No | 93(34.8%) | 48(29.8%) | 45(42.5%) | Ref | Ref |
| Interested in being on a public physician list capable of serving MSM | |||||
| Yes | 182(68.2%) | 118(73.3%) | 64(60.4%) | 1.80(1.07–3.04)* | 1.77(1.03–3.03)* |
| No | 85(31.8%) | 43(26.7%) | 42(39.6%) | Ref | Ref |
| Interested in further training focused on clinical services for MSM | |||||
| Yes | 194(72.7%) | 123(76.4%) | 71(67.0%) | 1.60(0.93–2.75) | |
| No | 73(27.3%) | 38(23.6%) | 35(33.0%) | Ref | |
| Physicians’ attitudes towards male homosexual | |||||
| Positive attitude | 157(58.8%) | 90(63.2%) | 67(55.9%) | Ref | |
| Neutral attitude | 77(28.8%) | 50(25.5%) | 27(31.3%) | 1.38(0.78–2.43) | |
| Negative attitude | 33(12.4%) | 21(11.3%) | 12(28.8%) | 1.30(0.60–2.83) | |
aPhysicians who have not seen MSM patients in the past 12 months were excluded;
baOR controlled for age, sex, and education;
cAssociate’s degree is usually earned in two years or more and can be attained at community colleges, technical colleges, vocational schools, and some colleges;
dGeneral medicine includes internal medicine, pediatrics and general practice;
eOthers include Reproductive Medicine, Andrology, Emergence clinic, Hematology, Professional Health, AIDS Prevention Office;
* p < 0.05; ** p ≤ 0.01; *** p ≤ 0.001