An Assessment of Emergency Nurses’ Perspectives on Nurse-Driven Human Immunodeficiency Virus Testing in the Emergency Department

Mandy J. Hill, Samuel Prater, Austin Bonnette, April Tinder, Marlene McNeese

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: Engaging emergency clinicians in universal human immunodeficiency virus screening is paramount to achieving goals of reengaging human immunodeficiency virus–positive persons into care, identifying new human immunodeficiency virus cases, and linking them to care. The study aim was to identify beliefs and barriers towards opt-out human immunodeficiency virus testing among emergency nurses. Methods: A cross-sectional study used Qualtrics software to deliver a survey on a tablet device to emergency nurses in a private Level 1 trauma hospital in Houston, Texas during downtimes of their clinical shifts. The survey evaluated perspectives on human immunodeficiency virus screening and knowledge relative to rapid screening and human immunodeficiency virus prevalence rates locally and nationally. Results: Fifty emergency nurses were enrolled. Few nurses accurately identified human immunodeficiency virus prevalence rates at the local hospital and city level (10% and 42%, respectively). Most (54%) of nurses correctly estimated human immunodeficiency virus prevalence rates nationally. Nearly half of the nurses (42.0%) correctly predicted the cost of a rapid human immunodeficiency virus test with accuracy and most were willing to offer rapid human immunodeficiency virus testing all the time (60.0%). Eighty-eight percent of nurses were supportive of facilitating universal human immunodeficiency virus screening. However, 92.0% strongly supported human immunodeficiency virus testing for high risk patients only when compared to 80.0% support of testing for all eligible patients. Qualitative data revealed time constraints and follow-up concerns as barriers. Discussion: Emergency nurses reported barriers that sometimes prevented application of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations to human immunodeficiency virus screening. Strategies to overcome these barriers are instrumental to programmatic success. Solutions can corroborate the importance of emergency nurses to the nation's Ending the HIV Epidemic plan.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)869-883
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Emergency Nursing
Volume46
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Emergency department
  • Emergency nurses
  • Program compliance
  • Universal HIV screening

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Emergency

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