Physician and Infection Control Practitioner HIV/AIDS Reporting Characteristics
Creator
Jones, Jeffrey L.
Meyer, Pamela
Garrison, Carol
Kettinger, Lynda
Hermann, Patricia
Bibliographic Citation
American Journal of Public Health. 1992 Jun; 82(6): 889-891.
Abstract
We surveyed a random sample of South Carolina physicians and infection control practitioners about the reporting of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) cases. Of physicians surveyed, 79% indicated that HIV infection as well as AIDS should be reported by name. The following characteristics were associated with those physicians who do not report AIDS cases: not feeling responsible for reporting, not reporting a case perceived to have been reported in another state, believing that information required for reporting is not on the chart, and residing in an urban setting. Targeted education can address these underreporting factors.
Date
1992-06Subject
Aids; Attitudes; Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome; Confidentiality; Contact Tracing; Duty to Warn; Discrimination; Education; Epidemiology; Evaluation; Evaluation Studies; Government; Government Regulation; Health; Health Personnel; HIV Seropositivity; Legal Obligations; Mandatory Programs; Physicians; Public Health; Records; Regulation; Reporting; Social Discrimination; Survey;
Collections
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Physician and Infection Control Practitioner HIV/AIDS Reporting Characteristics
Jones, Jeffrey L.; Meyer, Pamela; Garrison, Carol; Kettinger, Lynda; Hermann, Patricia (1992-06)We surveyed a random sample of South Carolina physicians and infection control practitioners about the reporting of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) cases. Of physicians surveyed, ...