Vestnik Dermatologii i Venerologii (Oct 2019)

The attitude of medical students towards HIV-infected people: fear or help?

  • A. A. Khryanin,
  • O. V. Reshetnikov,
  • T. A. Shpiks,
  • V. K. Bocharova,
  • M. V. Russkikh,
  • I. O. Marinkin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.25208/0042-4609-2019-95-4-40-47
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95, no. 4
pp. 40 – 47

Abstract

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The study was conducted during the 2017–2018 period using the method of anonymous questionnaire. In total, 838 4-year-students from medical, pediatric, dental and medical-prophylactic departments participated in the study. Two questionnaires were used for the survey: an adapted version of the standard UNAIDS questionnaire and that based on V. V. Boyko’s methodology of diagnosing communicative tolerance. It is found that medical students do not condemn HIV-infected people, nor believe that people with a positive HIV status necessarily behave immorally, thus deserving this disease. Medical students show a high level of professional communicative tolerance and readiness to help these patients, although being afraid of getting the infection during medical manipulations. At the same time, a low level of awareness concerning a number of legal issues regarding HIV-infected patients has been established.

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