158 research outputs found

    Understanding late HIV diagnosis among people from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds

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    This study aimed to investigate and understand reasons for late HIV diagnosis in New South Wales with particular focus on people from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds in the Sydney metropolitan area. The data from this study enables the development of culturally appropriate information campaigns and resources to encourage testing and prevent late HIV diagnosis particularly among people from CALD backgrounds

    Primary health care project on HIV and depression

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    Commencing in April 2006 this three-year-project adopted a comprehensive and multi-method approach to investigate the prevalence, nature, clinical management and self-management of depression among men, particularly homosexually active men, attending HIV-caseload general practice clinics

    Stigmatized attitudes toward people living with HIV in Bangladesh: Health care workers' perspectives

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    This study was conducted among 526 health care workers (HCWs) in Bangladesh to identify the levels and correlates of stigmatized attitudes toward people living with HIV (PLHIV). HIV-related stigmatized attitudes were measured by a set of items that reflected avoidance attitude of HCWs in hypothetical situations. A multiple linear regression model identified the following correlates of stigma: higher age, high level of irrational fear about HIV and AIDS, being HCW other than a doctor, working in teaching hospital, and rating religion as very important in their life (R2 =.502). The findings are important for both public health policy planners and human rights activists as high prevalence of stigmatized attitudes among HCWs influence the decision-making process of PLHIV and stop them from accessing voluntary counseling and testing, care, support, and treatment services

    Discourses of depression of Australian general practitioners working with gay men

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    The data for this article are from a primary health care project on HIV and depression, in which the prevalence, nature, clinical management, and self-management of depression among homosexually active men attending high-HIV-caseload general practice clinics were investigated. One of the qualitative arms consisted of in-depth interviews with general practitioners (GPs) with high caseloads of gay men. The approach to discourse analysis was informed by Halliday’s systemic functional linguistics. GPs constructed three discourses of depression: engaging with psychiatric discourse, engaging with the patient’s world, and engaging with social structures. When GPs drew on the discourse of psychiatry, this discourse was positioned as only one possible construction of depression. This discourse was also contextualized in the social lives of gay men, and it was explicitly challenged and rejected. Engaging with their patients’ social world was considered vital for recognizing depression in gay men. Finally, the GPs’ construction of depression was inextricably linked to social disadvantage and marginalization. Depression is highly heterogeneous and constructed in terms of social relationships rather than as an independent entity that resides in the individual. There is a synergy between GPs’ constructions of depression and men’s experiences of depression, which differs from conventional medical views, and which enables GPs to be highly effective in dealing with the mental health issues of their gay patients

    Does drug and alcohol use undermine concordance between doctors' assessments of major depression and patients' scores on a screening tool for depression among gay men attending general practice?

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    General practitioners (GPs) identify that depression can be difficult to diagnose in populations with high rates of alcohol and other drug (AOD) use. This is a particular concern with gay men who are a population known to engage in high rates of AOD use and who are vulnerable to depression. This paper uses data from 563 gay men and their GPs to describe concordance between assessments of major depression and, in particular, whether AOD use undermines concordance. Data were collected as part of a larger study of male patients and GPs at high HIV-caseload general practices in Australia. Concordance was measured by comparing patients’ scores on the PHQ-9 screening tool, which is based on DSM-IV criteria, and GPs’ ratings of the likelihood of depression for each participant. We observed high concordance between GPs’ assessments of major depression and patients’ scores on the PHQ-9 (79% agreement), although our analysis also suggests that concordance was better when it related to cases in which there was no depression. The high concordance observed in our study did not appear to be undermined by gay male patients’ AOD use, with the exception of frequent use of crystal methamphetamine. Here, men who reported frequent use of methamphetamine were significantly less likely to have concordant assessments (AOR 0.3, 95% CI 0.1-0.8). Overall, GPs appear to identify depression among many of their gay male patients. While GPs should be aware of the potential complications presented by frequent crystal methamphetamine use, other AOD use may have less impact on the diagnosis of depression

    Gay Community Periodic Survey: Melbourne February 1998

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    The Melbourne Gay Community Periodic Survey is a cross-sectional survey of gay and homosexually active men recruited through a range of sites in the Melbourne metropolitan area. The project was funded by the Victorian Department of Human Services. The Periodic Survey provides a snapshot of sexual and HIV-related practices among gay and homosexually active men

    Gay Community Periodic Survey: Sydney February 2007

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    Gay Community Periodic Surveys surveys are regularly conducted in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Cairns, Canberra, Adelaide and Perth to monitor changes in sexual and other risk practices over time among Australian gay men who are gay community attached, recruited from gay sex-on-premises venues, social sites and clinics

    Understanding and integrating the structural and biomedical determinants of HIV-infection: A way forward for prevention

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    As understanding and integrating the structural and biomedical determinants of HIV infection is essential for the success of prevention efforts, there is a need for biomedical and social scientists to work together
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