Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care (Jan 2018)

Whether Patients Want It or Not, Physician Recommendations Will Convince Them to Accept HIV Testing

  • Katherine Ellen Baumann BA,
  • Vagish Hemmige MD,
  • Michael Anthony Kallen PhD,
  • Richard Lewis Street PhD,
  • Thomas Peter Giordano MD,
  • Monisha Arya MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2325957417752258
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

Read online

Physicians are not routinely offering patients HIV testing, partly due to perceived patient discomfort with discussing HIV. This study assessed patients’ comfort level and whether physician recommendations can overcome any discomfort that does exist. In a publicly funded primary care clinic, we administered a survey exploring patient facilitators to HIV testing, with 266 patients answering the 2 main survey questions of interest. Most participants wanted their physician to offer HIV testing (n = 175; 65.8%). Even among participants who did not want their physician to offer HIV testing (n = 91), over half (n = 54; 59.3%) reported they would “likely” or “very likely” accept HIV testing if their physician recommended it. Based on our findings, not only are negative attitudes about HIV testing among patients uncommon but physician recommendations may be able to convince patients to receive HIV testing in spite of patients stating they do not want the test.