Clinical staff attitudes towards opt-out consent for blood-borne virus screening in emergency departments in England.

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES HIV Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-13 DOI:10.1111/hiv.13735
Esther G Blakey, Cassandra E L Fairhead, Alison J Rodger, Fiona M Burns, Lucie Ralph, David R Chadwick
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Abstract

Objective: Opt-out screening for blood-borne viruses (BBVs) in emergency departments (EDs) has been established in areas with a high prevalence of HIV diagnoses in England. This multi-site study explored the attitudes of healthcare workers (HCWs) towards BBV screening in EDs post-implementation.

Design: This was a cross-sectional electronic survey of HCWs.

Methods: Between November 2023 and February 2024, HCWs across 33 EDs in England participating in opt-out BBV screening were invited to complete a survey about the feasibility and acceptability of screening, including the opt-out consent process. Factors independently associated with acceptability of opt-out screening were identified using multivariable logistic regression. Free-text responses were analysed thematically.

Results: Responses from 610 HCWs in 19 EDs were provided: 50.4% were nurses, 43.1% doctors, and 6.5% other healthcare professionals. Acceptability of the screening programme and opt-out consent was high (90.3% and 77.7%, respectively), with some variation between EDs. Acceptability of opt-out consent was greater among doctors than among other HCWs, and among HCWs who proactively discussed screening further with patients who opted out. However, 50.8% of HCWs felt that patients should be verbally reminded at blood draw, and 44.3% of HCWs wanted more training in discussing opt-out screening with patients. Free-text answers suggested changes to test-ordering systems, including simple integration of tick boxes to document whether patients opted out and to block repeated testing.

Conclusions: There was substantial support from ED HCWs for routine opt-out ED BBV screening, including opt-out consent. Key areas suggested for improvement included changes to test-ordering systems and additional training for HCWs. Frequent preference for verbal reminders at the point of blood draw suggests continued HIV testing exceptionalism.

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英格兰急诊科临床人员对血液传播病毒筛查选择不同意的态度。
目的:在英国艾滋病诊断率较高的地区,急诊科(ED)中的血液传播病毒(BBV)筛查已被取消。这项多站点研究探讨了急诊科实施血液传播病毒筛查后,医护人员(HCWs)对筛查的态度:设计:这是一项针对医护人员的横断面电子调查:在 2023 年 11 月至 2024 年 2 月期间,英格兰 33 家参与选择不接受 BBV 筛查的急诊科医护人员受邀完成了一项关于筛查可行性和可接受性的调查,其中包括选择不接受筛查的同意程序。采用多变量逻辑回归法确定了与选择不接受筛查的可接受性独立相关的因素。对自由文本回复进行了专题分析:结果:19 家急诊室的 610 名医护人员提供了回复:50.4%为护士,43.1%为医生,6.5%为其他医护人员。筛查计划和选择不同意的接受度较高(分别为 90.3% 和 77.7%),但不同急诊室之间存在一定差异。与其他医护人员相比,医生和主动与选择不接受筛查的患者进一步讨论筛查的医护人员对选择不接受筛查同意书的接受度更高。然而,50.8% 的医护人员认为应在抽血时口头提醒患者,44.3% 的医护人员希望在与患者讨论选择不接受筛查时接受更多培训。自由文本答案建议对检测下单系统进行更改,包括简单地整合勾选框,以记录患者是否选择退出并阻止重复检测:结论:急诊科医护人员非常支持常规的选择不接受急诊科BBV筛查,包括选择不接受同意。建议改进的主要方面包括改变检测下单系统和对医护人员进行额外培训。抽血时口头提醒的频繁出现表明,HIV 检测仍然是例外情况。
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来源期刊
HIV Medicine
HIV Medicine 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
10.00%
发文量
167
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: HIV Medicine aims to provide an alternative outlet for publication of international research papers in the field of HIV Medicine, embracing clinical, pharmocological, epidemiological, ethical, preclinical and in vitro studies. In addition, the journal will commission reviews and other feature articles. It will focus on evidence-based medicine as the mainstay of successful management of HIV and AIDS. The journal is specifically aimed at researchers and clinicians with responsibility for treating HIV seropositive patients.
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