Guest guest Posted November 9, 2006 Report Share Posted November 9, 2006 NARI study finds bias in doctors, nurses while treating HIV affected Implicit Association Test measures stigma, shows feelings exhibited in a rapidfire session Anuradha Mascarenhas Pune, November 7: IN the world of people affected with HIV/AIDS, discrimination and bias are open secrets. Patients are often disowned by their families, left to care for themselves and young children are often turned away by locals schools. Now, the National AIDS Research Institute (NARI) at Bhosari has found that an unconscious bias does exist even among doctors and nurses while treating HIV patients. In a first-of-its-kind study to `measure' stigma in health settings, NARI has developed an Implicit Association Test (IAT) that examines the thoughts and unconscious feelings of healthcare providers while treating patients with HIV. NARI researchers, who developed this test to suit the Indian culture, say the IAT was used to guage the implicit and explicit attitudes of healthcare providers. Some 200 doctors and nurses in three government hospitals in Pune and Pimpri-Chinchwad for the last two years took the test. The study was done in collaboration with Yale University, USA, NARI director Dr R S Paranjape said. The IAT was introduced to assess attitudes related to race and gender issues in the West and reveals the existence of discrepancy between implicit and explicit attitudes. " This is a self-administered test and the study showed a wide range of feelings exhibited by clinicians. Stigma definitely exists at both implicit and explicit levels among the healthcare providers. For doctors, AIDS is often a fatal disease while nurses significantly associate AIDS as a sexually transmitted disease,'' said NARI deputy director (senior grade) Dr Nita Mawar. These attitudes eventually lead to discrimination against the HIV patient who is isolated in the ward and often the last one to get treated, said Mawar who is also the head of the Social and Behavioural division of NARI. At NARI, the test was developed specifically to suit the Indian sensibility. It is a quickly administered tool that asks 20 questions to be answered in 20 seconds. It tested the unconscious response of an individual to a specific stimuli. For instance, doctors were asked questions like is AIDS good or bad in relation to cholera, leukaemia or syphilis. " Basically, the tool was devised to measure stigma associated with HIV/AIDS as a fatal disease or as a sexually transmitted disease or as an infectious disease,'' explains Mawar. While studies have been initiated globally on HIV/AIDS related stigma, the two-year study strongly recommended that inconsistent knowledge, beliefs and standards of care for HIV positive patients by the hospital staff should urgently be addressed through comprehensive training to focus on HIV/AIDS care standards, universal safety precautions, patients sensitivity and modified standards. http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=208643 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 10, 2006 Report Share Posted November 10, 2006 Dear FORUM, What NARI study found is a fact. stigma and discrimination is common in the medical colleges even in the most literate people domiciled kerala. Unconscious inattention to HIV patients is common among doctors. Several times many patients reported discrimination from nurses. one VCTC counsellor told me abt a nurse who didn't gave any attention to the painful cry of an hiv affected lady. it was heard that the nurse commented ' SHE'S AN HIV PATIENT. LET HER SUFFER SOME PAIN'. If this is the case in kerala we can imagine those issues in other states. Smothered cries due to such malfunctionings should come out vociferously. Terence. research scholar, dept. of psychology, calicut university, kerala e-mail: <jeanterence@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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