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Provider perceptions of key barriers to providing state-of-the-art clinical care for HIV-infected African-American patients

U.S. AIDS rates have declined among same population groups; however, African-Americans and other ethnic minorities have experienced the least amount of decline. As a result medical and public health authorities are tasked with developing strategies to help eliminate the disparity in HIV/AIDS inciden...

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Published in:Journal of the National Medical Association 2003-02, Vol.95 (2 Suppl 2), p.12S-20S
Main Authors: Lee-Ougo, Wilhelmena, Boekeloo, Bradley O, Thompson, Estina E, Funnyé, Alen S, Jackson, Rudolph E, ShuTangyie, Gerard, McNeil, J I
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container_end_page 20S
container_issue 2 Suppl 2
container_start_page 12S
container_title Journal of the National Medical Association
container_volume 95
creator Lee-Ougo, Wilhelmena
Boekeloo, Bradley O
Thompson, Estina E
Funnyé, Alen S
Jackson, Rudolph E
ShuTangyie, Gerard
McNeil, J I
description U.S. AIDS rates have declined among same population groups; however, African-Americans and other ethnic minorities have experienced the least amount of decline. As a result medical and public health authorities are tasked with developing strategies to help eliminate the disparity in HIV/AIDS incidence rate and clinical outcomes. Thus, in 1999, the National Minority AIDS Education and Training Center (NMAETC) was developed to facilitate training, clinical consultation and technical assistance to clinicians that provide care to HIV-infected minority patients. Its initial activities were designed solely to increase providers' clinical capacity to use state-of-art anti-retroviral therapies to treat and manage the disease. However, through focused discussions with target providers and a survey of medical care service sites, the NMAETC confirms that provider' training and assistance needs extend into non-medical domains.
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identifier ISSN: 0027-9684
ispartof Journal of the National Medical Association, 2003-02, Vol.95 (2 Suppl 2), p.12S-20S
issn 0027-9684
1943-4693
language eng
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source PubMed Central
subjects African Americans - statistics & numerical data
Education, Medical
Focus Groups
Health Services Accessibility
HIV Infections - ethnology
HIV Infections - therapy
Humans
Incidence
Minority Groups
Patient Care
Socioeconomic Factors
United States - epidemiology
title Provider perceptions of key barriers to providing state-of-the-art clinical care for HIV-infected African-American patients
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