Ensuring that people living with HIV (PLWH) feel accepted in health care settings is imperative. This mixed methods study explored the perspectives of PLWH and health professionals on their interactions. A total of 262 predominantly gay men of Dutch origin participated in a survey study of possible negative interactions with health professionals, and semi-structured interviews were subsequently conducted with 22 PLWH and 14 health professionals. Again, most PLWH were gay men of Dutch origin. All health professionals were Dutch. PLWH reported negative experiences with health professionals including awkward interactions, irrelevant questions, rude treatment, blame, pity, excessive or differential precautions, care refusal, unnecessary referrals, delayed treatment, poor support, and confidentiality breaches. They also reported positive experiences including equal treatment, being valued as a partner in one's health, social support provision, and confidentiality assurances. Health professionals reported having little experience with PLWH and only basic knowledge of HIV. They contended that PLWH are treated equally and that HIV is no longer stigmatized, but also reported fear of occupational infection, resulting in differential precautions. Additionally, they conveyed labeling PLWH's files to warn others, and curiosity regarding how patients acquired HIV. The findings suggest that there is a gap in perception between PLWH and health professionals regarding the extent to which negative interactions occur, and that these interactions should be improved. Implications for stigma reduction and care optimization are discussed.
We qualitatively investigated perspectives on HIV disclosure to health care providers (HCP) by people living with HIV (PLWH). Perspectives varied across PLWH and between PLWH and HCP. Some PLWH felt they should always disclose so that HCP could take necessary precautions or because disclosure optimized care. Others felt that disclosure was not an obligation but a courtesy. Still others felt that disclosure was unnecessary as all HCP should apply universal precautions or because HIV status was not relevant to care. Most HCP claimed they should be informed about patients' HIV status as this would reduce occupational risk of infection and improve care. HCP also felt that disclosure concerns by PLWH were unnecessary given the HCP' duty of professional confidentiality. Some acknowledged that disclosure was not always necessary but still indicated wanting to be informed. Perspectives on HIV disclosure in health care settings differed substantially between PLWH and HCP.
IntroductionIn 2012, the Netherlands introduced a conditional reimbursement (CR) program to give patients earlier access to promising treatments (i.e., drugs and medical devices). After completion of the CR-study the results are used to (re)assess whether the treatment fulfills the criteria for reimbursement.MethodsPromising treatments were identified via a bottom-up (physicians/researchers initiated) or top-down process (after the Dutch National Health Care Institute (Zorginstituut Netherland; ZIN) concluded that the intervention did not fulfill the criteria for reimbursement but the initial results seemed promising). A CR-grant was only approved if a committee determined the treatment had an added (health, social, ethical or organizational) benefit compared to Standard of Care (SoC) and the grant proposal was of good quality and fit for purpose. After approval from the Dutch Ministry of Health, all Dutch insurance companies were obliged to reimburse the treatment for patients participating in the CR-study. Researchers could also apply for a research grant (maximum EUR 400,000) from the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw), if there was no ‘wealthy’ manufacturer.ResultsCurrently, there are 23 (ongoing and completed) CR-studies. All of them are closely monitored by ZIN, ZonMw, and stakeholders. The results of all completed CR-studies (n = 11) have been used in a (re)assessment. ZIN concluded that five treatments were not effective compared to SoC. Six interventions were effective and cost-effective compared to SoC and are now reimbursed. In most cases (>80%) the physician and patient groups agreed with the conclusion about reimbursement. In some cases there were additional requirements to maintain the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness in clinical practice (such as training of new physicians).ConclusionsData from CR-studies are important for reassessments. Factors with a positive influence are: a maximum duration for a CR-study, close monitoring, possibility to adapt the study design (only with approval from ZIN and ZonMw), and active involvement of stakeholders (physician and patient groups). A negative influence was: the legal requirements to ensure only reimbursement for patients participating in a CR-study.
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