Vd. Hope et C. Macarthur, A COMPARISON OF HIV-RELATED ADVICE IN GENITOURINARY MEDICINE CLINICS WITH DIFFERENT HISTORIES, Genitourinary medicine, 72(4), 1996, pp. 286-289
Objectives: To examine attendees reported experiences of health advice
provision in genitourinary (GUM) clinics with different histories. De
sign: A self-completed anonymous questionnaire was distributed at five
clinics in the West Midlands Region of the United Kingdom. Results: 2
97 of the 360 attendees approached returned completed questionnaires;
89.5% reported receiving health advice, 86.4% found all of this easy t
o understand and 10.4% wanted more advice. However, 33.9% received no
advice on either HN or safer sex. Those attending new clinics, set up
since the HIV pandemic, were more likely than those attending older cl
inics, to have understood the advice given, to have had advice on both
HIV and safer sex, and less likely to have wanted more advice. Among
those attending with a concern about HIV, 14% claimed to have received
no advice on either HN or safer sex; with no difference between old a
nd new clinics. For those attending with reasons particularly relevant
to receiving HIV related advice, but not with a concern about HIV, 40
% claimed to have received neither HN nor safer sex advice. In this su
b-sample, those attending new clinics were more likely to have receive
d advice on HN as well as safer sex, and less Likely to want more advi
ce. Conclusions: The results indicate that the provision of advice nee
ds to be reconsidered, particularly in older clinics.