| Literature DB >> 7673581 |
J S McDaniel1, L M Carlson, N J Thompson, D W Purcell.
Abstract
Researchers have found that a significant number of medical students harbor attitudes that have a negative impact on their willingness to care for persons who are HIV positive or have AIDS. To assess current HIV and AIDS knowledge and attitudes, the authors administered a 25-item survey tailored for medical professionals to 63 preclinical medical students. Respondents' mean score on the knowledge scale was 6.25 (SD 1.63) out of a possible score of 10. Factor analysis suggested three major groupings of medical students with regard to attitudes. The largest group had generally positive attitudes about patients with HIV and AIDS; two subgroups, however, would tend to refer such patients to another physician. One subgroup reported feeling more uncomfortable with homosexual behavior and with HIV-seropositive patients than they did with patients with other infectious diseases. This group also expressed discomfort with physically touching HIV-seropositive clients. The other group expressed discomfort with taking a patient's sexual history. Effective educational interventions must take these findings into account.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1995 PMID: 7673581 DOI: 10.1080/07448481.1995.9937503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Coll Health ISSN: 0744-8481