Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?

Abstract Background Current literature suggests the number of HIV clinicians in the United States is diminishing. There are 294,834 primary care providers (PCP) in the United States, and, of these, 3101 provide care to HIV-positive patients. More PCPs to treat and manage HIV patients may be the solu...

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Main Authors: Sampath Wijesinghe, Jeffrey L. Alexander
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Family Practice
Subjects:
HIV
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-020-01198-7
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spelling doaj-1c8bef41ad9848b993358c48192fee4a2020-11-25T04:00:23ZengBMCBMC Family Practice1471-22962020-07-0121111110.1186/s12875-020-01198-7Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?Sampath Wijesinghe0Jeffrey L. Alexander1College of Graduate Health Studies, A. T. Still UniversityCollege of Graduate Health Studies, A. T. Still UniversityAbstract Background Current literature suggests the number of HIV clinicians in the United States is diminishing. There are 294,834 primary care providers (PCP) in the United States, and, of these, 3101 provide care to HIV-positive patients. More PCPs to treat and manage HIV patients may be the solution to alleviate the HIV provider shortage. However, PCPs also face challenges, including workforce shortages. We surveyed PCPs to determine perceived barriers, beliefs, and attitudes about their readiness to manage and treat HIV patients. Methods Following a quantitative, descriptive, cross-sectional survey design, currently practicing clinicians in primary care (physicians, residents, physician assistants, family nurse practitioners) were emailed a link to the study survey. Three hundred forty-seven family medicine clinicians from 47 states met the study inclusion criteria. Results Most (245/347, 70.6%) of the PCPs agreed that PCPs should take care of HIV patients. PCPs practicing HIV medicine (n = 171) were more likely than those not practicing HIV medicine (n = 176) to agree that PCPs should help with the HIV provider shortage (U = 10,384, p < 0.001) and that PCPs are the best solution to the HIV provider shortage (U = 10,294, p < 0.001). The majority (206, 59.4%) believed PCPs are the best solution for the HIV provider shortage. Of 133 physician assistants (PAs) and family nurse practitioners (NPs), seventy (52.6%) believed they could be ready to manage HIV patients with some training. Conclusion The HIV provider shortage in the United States is likely to continue. To alleviate the provider shortage, PCPs should be offered additional training, decreased workload, and increased compensation when treating and managing HIV patients. Also, encouraging PAs and family NPs to be involved with HIV medicine may be a solution.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-020-01198-7HIVPrimary carePrimary care providersHIV provider shortagePrimary care workforce shortageChallenges with HIV disease
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sampath Wijesinghe
Jeffrey L. Alexander
spellingShingle Sampath Wijesinghe
Jeffrey L. Alexander
Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
BMC Family Practice
HIV
Primary care
Primary care providers
HIV provider shortage
Primary care workforce shortage
Challenges with HIV disease
author_facet Sampath Wijesinghe
Jeffrey L. Alexander
author_sort Sampath Wijesinghe
title Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
title_short Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
title_full Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
title_fullStr Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
title_full_unstemmed Management and treatment of HIV: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
title_sort management and treatment of hiv: are primary care clinicians prepared for their new role?
publisher BMC
series BMC Family Practice
issn 1471-2296
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Current literature suggests the number of HIV clinicians in the United States is diminishing. There are 294,834 primary care providers (PCP) in the United States, and, of these, 3101 provide care to HIV-positive patients. More PCPs to treat and manage HIV patients may be the solution to alleviate the HIV provider shortage. However, PCPs also face challenges, including workforce shortages. We surveyed PCPs to determine perceived barriers, beliefs, and attitudes about their readiness to manage and treat HIV patients. Methods Following a quantitative, descriptive, cross-sectional survey design, currently practicing clinicians in primary care (physicians, residents, physician assistants, family nurse practitioners) were emailed a link to the study survey. Three hundred forty-seven family medicine clinicians from 47 states met the study inclusion criteria. Results Most (245/347, 70.6%) of the PCPs agreed that PCPs should take care of HIV patients. PCPs practicing HIV medicine (n = 171) were more likely than those not practicing HIV medicine (n = 176) to agree that PCPs should help with the HIV provider shortage (U = 10,384, p < 0.001) and that PCPs are the best solution to the HIV provider shortage (U = 10,294, p < 0.001). The majority (206, 59.4%) believed PCPs are the best solution for the HIV provider shortage. Of 133 physician assistants (PAs) and family nurse practitioners (NPs), seventy (52.6%) believed they could be ready to manage HIV patients with some training. Conclusion The HIV provider shortage in the United States is likely to continue. To alleviate the provider shortage, PCPs should be offered additional training, decreased workload, and increased compensation when treating and managing HIV patients. Also, encouraging PAs and family NPs to be involved with HIV medicine may be a solution.
topic HIV
Primary care
Primary care providers
HIV provider shortage
Primary care workforce shortage
Challenges with HIV disease
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12875-020-01198-7
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