Title of article
HIV postexposure prophylaxis practices by US ED practitioners
Author/Authors
Rol، نويسنده , , Roland C. Merchant، نويسنده , , Reza Keshavarz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
4
From page
309
To page
312
Abstract
To determine how often US ED practitioners have prescribed HIV post-exposure prophylaxis (HIV PEP) and to discern how willing they are to offer it to patients, the authors surveyed 600 ED practitioners attending a national conference. According to their self-report, 11% had taken HIV PEP themselves. Sixty-eight percent had prescribed HIV PEP at some time. Of these, 92% had treated needlestick-injured health care workers, 48% sexual assault survivors, and 49% nonhealth care needlestick-injured persons. ED practitioners were more willing to offer HIV PEP after exposures to HIV-infected or high-risk sources than unknown or low- risk sources, as well as after sexual assault than consensual sex. Female practitioners, those who had themselves taken HIV PEP, resident physicians, and ED practitioners with fewer than 6 years of clinical practice were generally more apt to offer HIV PEP. Educational campaigns appear to be necessary to help ED practitioners determine when HIV PEP is appropriate.
Keywords
HIV post-exposure prophylaxis , HIV prevention , post-exposure prophylaxis , HIV , Prophylaxis
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Record number
780348
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