Are We Ready to Follow HIV/AIDS Patients?/HIV/AIDS Hastalarim Takip Etmeye Hazir miyiz?
Objective: There is an increase in the number of HIV/AIDS cases in our city, which is parallel to the increase in our country. We started to follow HIV/AIDS cases in our center last year, and we conducted a survey to evaluate the knowledge level and attitudes of physicians and nurses working in our...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | KLIMIK dergisi 2022-03, Vol.35 (1), p.40 |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Objective: There is an increase in the number of HIV/AIDS cases in our city, which is parallel to the increase in our country. We started to follow HIV/AIDS cases in our center last year, and we conducted a survey to evaluate the knowledge level and attitudes of physicians and nurses working in our hospital about HIV/AIDS, and the survey results were evaluated. Methods: A questionnaire consisting of 25 questions covering the demographic characteristics of the participants and measuring the level of knowledge about HIV/AIDS was applied. Results: 120 physicians and nurses with a mean age of 35.28[+ or -]8.58 participated in the survey. 62.5% were women. 55% were physicians, 45% nurses, 58.3% from internal medicine, 38.3% were surgical branches, and 3.3% were from basic sciences. All healthcare workers knew that HIV was transmitted through sexual contact and blood, and 99.2% with the use of shared injectors. 65% of the participants knew that HIV could be transmitted by breast milk, but 45.8% thought it could be transmitted by kissing. 45% of the participants, most of which were nurses, thought that the disease had no cure (p=0.001). 82.5% were aware of the increase in HIV cases in the country, and 56.7% thought that there was also an increase in our city. Although participants wanted these cases to be followed in our hospital (75.8%) and thought that prejudiced behavior was wrong (89.2%), they did not want to be included in the care of these patients (73%) due to the fear of contagion. They thought that it would be appropriate to follow them only in the Infectious Diseases clinic (60.8%). Conclusions: Even if they are not fully aware of it, healthcare professionals approach HIV/AIDS cases with prejudice. One of the reasons for this is the lack of knowledge about the disease. Lack of knowledge brings along discrimination and stigmatization. In-service training programs are needed to overcome this situation. Keywords: Survey, healthcare workers, knowledge of HIV. Amac: Ulkemizdeki HIV/AIDS olgu sayilarindaki artisa paralel olarak ilimizdeki olgu sayilarinda da artis gorulmektedir. Merkezimizde olgularin takip edilmeye baslanmasini izleyen surecte calisan hekim ve hemsirelerimizin HIV/AIDS konusundaki bilgi duzeylerinin ve konuya bakis acilarinin degerlendirilmesi amaciyla bir anket calismasi gerceklestirildi ve calismamizda bu calismanin sonuclari irdelendi. Yontemler: Hekim ve hemsirelere, demografik ozellikleri dikkate alinarak, HIV/AIDS hakkindaki bilgi (bul |
---|---|
ISSN: | 1301-143X |
DOI: | 10.36519/kd.2022.3798 |