| Literature DB >> 32611326 |
Sampath Wijesinghe1,2, Jeffrey L Alexander3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current literature suggests the number of HIV clinicians in the United States is diminishing. There are 294,834 primary care providers (PCP) in the United States, and, of these, 3101 provide care to HIV-positive patients. More PCPs to treat and manage HIV patients may be the solution to alleviate the HIV provider shortage. However, PCPs also face challenges, including workforce shortages. We surveyed PCPs to determine perceived barriers, beliefs, and attitudes about their readiness to manage and treat HIV patients.Entities:
Keywords: Challenges with HIV disease; HIV; HIV provider shortage; Primary care; Primary care providers; Primary care workforce shortage
Year: 2020 PMID: 32611326 PMCID: PMC7330969 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-020-01198-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Demographic Characteristics of Primary Care Clinicians Who Completed the Survey (N = 347)
| Demographic Characteristic | No (%) or Mean (SD) |
|---|---|
| Designation | |
| Physician | 172 (49.6) |
| Resident physician | 42 (12.1) |
| Physician assistant | 67 (19.3) |
| Nurse practitioner | 66 (19.0) |
| Extent of practice | |
| Full-time | 258 (74.4) |
| Part-time | 54 (15.6) |
| Locum/per diem | 12 (3.5) |
| Other | 23 (6.6) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 142 (40.9) |
| Female | 202 (58.5) |
| Transgender | 2 (0.6) |
| Mean age | 43·2 (11.9) |
| Mean number of hours weekly | 39·3 (15.5) |
| Mean number of years in practice | 12·2 (10.8) |
| Plan to retire | |
| Within 2 years | 8 (2.3) |
| Within 2–5 years | 16 (4.6) |
| Within 5–10 years | 54 (15.6) |
| More than 10 years | 160 (46.1) |
| No plan to retire | 109 (31.4) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |
| White | 203 (58.5) |
| Hispanic and Latino | 42 (12.1) |
| Black or African American | 25 (7.2) |
| Asian | 42 (12.1) |
| Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander | 1 (0.3) |
| Other | 34 (9.8) |
| Practice state | |
| California | 101 (29.1) |
| Colorado | 22 (6.3) |
| Florida | 16 (4.6) |
| Illinois | 14 (4.0) |
| Nebraska | 15 (4.3) |
| New York | 20 (5.8) |
| North Carolina | 10 (2.9) |
| Pennsylvania | 14 (4.0) |
| Texas | 17 (4.9) |
| Washington | 11 (3.2) |
| Remaining 37 states | 107 (30.9) |
| Practice location | |
| Urban | 167 (48.1) |
| Suburban | 91 (26.2) |
| Rural | 89 (25.7) |
| Practice setting | |
| Hospital | 39 (11.2) |
| Solo practice | 34 (9.8) |
| Group practice | 112 (32.3) |
| Community care (rural health/federally qualified) | 130 (37.5) |
| Other | 32 (9.2) |
| Average number of patients treated in a day | |
| 9 or fewer | 48 (13.8) |
| 10–19 | 180 (51.9) |
| 20–29 | 104 (30.0) |
| More than 30 | 15 (4.3) |
| Currently treat HIV patients | |
| Yes | 171 (49.3) |
| No | 176 (50.7) |
| Certified HIV specialist | |
| Yes | 80 (23.0) |
| No | 224 (64.6) |
| No, but considering becoming an HIV specialist | 42 (12.1) |
| Yes, but considering quitting the specialty | 1 (0.3) |
Primary Care Clinicians’ Knowledge About Management and Treatment of HIV
| Survey Question | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | Uncertain | |
| There is an HIV provider shortage in the United States | 257 (74.1) | 12 (3.5) | 78 (22.5) |
| Because of antiretroviral therapy, HIV patients live longer now than in previous years | 346 (99.7) | 0 | 1 (0.3) |
| HIV is a chronic disease | 340 (98.0) | 5 (1.4) | 2 (0.6) |
| Over the past 10 years, HIV treatments have advanced greatly | 332 (95.7) | 4 (1.2) | 11 (3.2) |
| Every year there are about 50,000 new HIV patients | 186 (53.6) | 8 (2.3) | 153 (44.1) |
Primary Care Clinicians’ Beliefs about Management and Treatment of HIV
| Survey Question | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Agree | Uncertain | Disagree | |
| I have the necessary clinical knowledge to manage and treat HIV patients | |||
| All PCPs | 143 (41.2) | 52 (15.0) | 152 (43.8) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 90 (70.2) | 19 (11.1) | 32 (18.7) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 23 (13.0) | 33 (18.8) | 120 (68.2) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 44 (33.1) | 19 (14.3) | 70 (52.6) |
| I have the necessary education to manage and treat HIV patients | |||
| All PCPs | 161 (46.4) | 48 (13.8) | 138 (39.8) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 125 (74.1) | 15 (8.8) | 31 (18.1) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 36 (20.4) | 33 (18.8) | 107 (60.8) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 53 (39.8) | 17 (12.8) | 63 (47.4) |
| With some training, I will be ready to take care of HIV patients | |||
| All PCPs | 207 (59.7) | 118 (34.0) | 22 (6.3) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 87 (50.8) | 80 (46.8) | 4 (2.4) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 120 (68.2) | 38 (21.6) | 18 (10.2) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 70 (52.6) | 55 (41.4) | 8 (6.0) |
| Primary care clinicians should take care of HIV patients | |||
| All PCPs | 245 (70.6) | 60 (17.3) | 42 (12.1) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 142 (83.0) | 17 (9.9) | 12 (7.0) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 103 (58.5) | 43 (24.4) | 30 (17.1) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 70 (52.6) | 37 (27.8) | 26 (19.5) |
| The number of new HIV cases is stable in the United States; therefore, there is no need to worry about HIV anymore | |||
| All PCPs | 1 (0.3) | 31 (8.9) | 315 (90.8) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 1 (0.6) | 4 (2.3) | 166 (97.0) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 0 (0.0) | 27 (15.3) | 149 (84.7) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 0 (0.0) | 13 (9.8) | 120 (90.2) |
| Planning to resolve the HIV provider shortage is a priority of the healthcare agencies at this time | |||
| All PCPs | 109 (22.4) | 119 (34.3) | 119 (34.3) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 57 (33.3) | 45 (26.3) | 69 (40.3) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 52 (29.5) | 74 (42.0) | 50 (28.5) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 44 (33.1) | 44 (33.1) | 45 (33.8) |
| When treating HIV patients, clinicians are compensated sufficiently | |||
| All PCPs | 26 (7.5) | 183 (52.7) | 138 (39.8) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 20 (11.7) | 66 (38.6) | 85 (49.7) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 6 (3.4) | 117 (66.5) | 53 (30.1) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 7 (5.3) | 77 (57.9) | 49 (36.8) |
N = 347 for all PCPs, n = 171 for only PCPs involved with HIV medicine, n = 176 for only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine, and n = 133 for only
PAs and NPs. Abbreviations: NP Nurse practitioner, PA Physician assistant, PCP Primary care provider (includes physicians, PAs, and NPs)
Primary Care Clinicians’ Attitudes About Management and Treatment of HIV
| Survey Question | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Agree | Uncertain | Disagree | |
| I worry about the projected HIV workforce shortage | |||
| All PCPs | 193 (55.6) | 93 (26.8) | 61 (17.6) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 121 (70.8) | 32 (18.7) | 18 (10.5) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 72 (40.9) | 61 (34.7) | 43 (24.4) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 67 (50.4) | 41 (30.8) | 25 (18.8) |
| There are enough other health care crises to worry about than HIV | |||
| All PCPs | 51 (14.7) | 78 (22.5) | 218 (62.8) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 21 (12.3) | 31 (18.1) | 119 (69.5) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 30 (17.0) | 47 (26.7) | 99 (56.3) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 15 (11.3) | 31 (23.3) | 87 (65.4) |
| I would like to take care of HIV patients while providing primary care | |||
| All PCPs | 239 (68.9) | 68 (19.6) | 40 (11.5) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 155 (90.6) | 11 (6.4) | 5 (3.0) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 84 (47.7) | 57 (32.4) | 35 (19.9) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 80 (60.2) | 33 (24.8) | 20 (15.0) |
| If a primary care clinician is the answer to alleviate HIV provider shortage, I should help out | |||
| All PCPs | 291 (83.8) | 41 (11.8) | 15 (4.4) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 136 (97.0) | 3 (1.8) | 2 (1.2) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 125 (71.0) | 38 (21.6) | 13 (7.4) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 107 (80.5) | 20 (15.0) | 6 (4.5) |
| I would like to attend 1–2 years HIV salaried specialist fellowship training, if available | |||
| All PCPs | 87 (25.1) | 101 (29.1) | 159 (45.8) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 46 (26.9) | 60 (35.1) | 65 (35.0) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 41 (23.3) | 41 (23.3) | 94 (53.4) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 47 (35.3) | 39 (29.3) | 47 (35.3) |
| I will consider taking care of HIV patients if I have enough time | |||
| All PCPs | 209 (60.2) | 107 (30.9) | 31 (8.9) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 99 (57.8) | 66 (38.6) | 6 (3.5) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 110 (62.5) | 41 (23.3) | 25 (14.2) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 77 (57.9) | 44 (33.1) | 12 (9.0) |
| I will consider taking care of HIV patients if I am compensated better | |||
| All PCPs | 179 (51.6) | 92 (26.5) | 76 (21.9) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 95 (55.6) | 35 (20.5) | 41 (20.9) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 84 (47.7) | 57 (32.4) | 35 (19.9) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 62 (46.6) | 38 (28.6) | 33 (24.8) |
| I am not interested in HIV medicine | |||
| All PCPs | 43 (12.4) | 40 (11.5) | 264 (76.1) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 5 (3.0) | 6 (3.5) | 160 (93.6) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 38 (21.6) | 34 (19.3) | 104 (59.1) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 20 (15.0) | 19 (14.3) | 94 (70.7) |
| Primary care providers are the best solution to the HIV provider shortage | |||
| All PCPs | 206 (59.3) | 113 (32.6) | 28 (8.1) |
| Only PCPs involved with HIV medicine | 123 (71.9) | 39 (22.8) | 9 (5.3) |
| Only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine | 83 (47.2) | 74 (42.0) | 19 (10.8) |
| Only PAs and NPs | 65 (48.9) | 50 (37.6) | 18 (13.5) |
N = 347 for all PCPs, n = 171 for only PCPs involved with HIV medicine, n = 176 for only PCPs not involved with HIV medicine, and n = 133 for only PAs and NPs
Abbreviations: NP Nurse practitioner, PA Physician assistant, PCP Primary care provider (includes physicians, PAs, and NPs)
Fig. 1Comparison analysis between groups: PCP’s who currently practice HIV medicine vs. PCP’s who currently do not practice HIV medicine
Fig. 2Comparison analysis between groups: PCP’s who currently practice HIV medicine vs. PCP’s who currently do not practice HIV medicine