International journal of STD & AIDS
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One thousand consecutive attenders at a Department of Genitourinary Medicine (GUM) completed an anonymous questionnaire to assess the GUM services and provide suggestions for improvement. The replies showed patient preferences to be for an appointment system (68%), separate waiting rooms (84% women, 57% men) and to see the same doctor at each visit (75%). Forty-six per cent of women and 33% of men preferred to be seen by a doctor of the same sex, 38% requested evening clinics and 20% of patients wished to be interviewed with their partner.
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The Report of the Working Group on the Short-Term Prediction of AIDS/HIV (the Cox Report) is reviewed mainly to assess its calculations of the numbers of people in England and Wales who are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Two main methods are used in the report to estimate this total--the direct method and the back projection method. The direct method estimates the number of people infected with HIV by attempting to specify the numbers of people in various at-risk groups, and the percentage infected in those groups. ⋯ The back projection method estimates HIV prevalence from the numbers of cases of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and the incubation function, the relationship between HIV infection and the probabilities of AIDS in each of the years following infection. Using this method the Cox Report fails to produce results that are in accordance with our knowledge of how the epidemic developed during the 1980s. As a consequence of this the various calculations of numbers of HIV antibody-positives to 1987 given in the Cox Report are all almost certainly underestimates.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)