Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students

Introduction. Nurses have a frontier caring role that brings them in close contact with patients' blood and body fluids. An understanding of their professional behavior is essential to assess and minimize the occupational exposure to HIV among them. Objectives. (1) To appraise the knowledge, at...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Siddharudha Shivalli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2014-01-01
Series:Advances in Preventive Medicine
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/296148
id doaj-86fe8fccb0b84fb09c081613bd0e25d7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-86fe8fccb0b84fb09c081613bd0e25d72020-11-24T22:26:23ZengHindawi LimitedAdvances in Preventive Medicine2090-34802090-34992014-01-01201410.1155/2014/296148296148Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing StudentsSiddharudha Shivalli0Community Medicine, Yenepoya Medical College, Yenepoya University, Mangalore 575018, IndiaIntroduction. Nurses have a frontier caring role that brings them in close contact with patients' blood and body fluids. An understanding of their professional behavior is essential to assess and minimize the occupational exposure to HIV among them. Objectives. (1) To appraise the knowledge, attitudes, and preventive practices of nursing students pertaining to occupational exposure to HIV. (2) To quantify the risk and correlates of exposure to HIV among them. Methodology. Cross-sectional study was conducted in a nursing college of Varanasi, India. A semistructured and pretested pro forma consisting of questions pertaining to modes of HIV transmission, universal precaution practices, and various aspects of nursing HIV patients was utilized. Independent sample t- and z-tests were applied to judge the association of study variables with the knowledge and risk of HIV. Results. The study sample consisted of 87 female and 16 male nurses. Participants' knowledge of HIV transmission was satisfactory. More than 80% of them had an exposure to blood/body fluid in the last year. Exposure rates for blood/body fluid did not show a significant association P>0.05 with study variables. Conclusion. There were serious lacunae in implementation of the universal precautions despite satisfactory knowledge. Reinforcement of universal precautions is required.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/296148
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Siddharudha Shivalli
spellingShingle Siddharudha Shivalli
Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students
Advances in Preventive Medicine
author_facet Siddharudha Shivalli
author_sort Siddharudha Shivalli
title Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students
title_short Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students
title_full Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students
title_fullStr Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students
title_full_unstemmed Occupational Exposure to HIV: Perceptions and Preventive Practices of Indian Nursing Students
title_sort occupational exposure to hiv: perceptions and preventive practices of indian nursing students
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Advances in Preventive Medicine
issn 2090-3480
2090-3499
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Introduction. Nurses have a frontier caring role that brings them in close contact with patients' blood and body fluids. An understanding of their professional behavior is essential to assess and minimize the occupational exposure to HIV among them. Objectives. (1) To appraise the knowledge, attitudes, and preventive practices of nursing students pertaining to occupational exposure to HIV. (2) To quantify the risk and correlates of exposure to HIV among them. Methodology. Cross-sectional study was conducted in a nursing college of Varanasi, India. A semistructured and pretested pro forma consisting of questions pertaining to modes of HIV transmission, universal precaution practices, and various aspects of nursing HIV patients was utilized. Independent sample t- and z-tests were applied to judge the association of study variables with the knowledge and risk of HIV. Results. The study sample consisted of 87 female and 16 male nurses. Participants' knowledge of HIV transmission was satisfactory. More than 80% of them had an exposure to blood/body fluid in the last year. Exposure rates for blood/body fluid did not show a significant association P>0.05 with study variables. Conclusion. There were serious lacunae in implementation of the universal precautions despite satisfactory knowledge. Reinforcement of universal precautions is required.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/296148
work_keys_str_mv AT siddharudhashivalli occupationalexposuretohivperceptionsandpreventivepracticesofindiannursingstudents
_version_ 1725753913056952320