1. Fertility services for human immunodeficiency virus–positive patients: provider policy, practice, and perspectives
- Author
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Stanitis, Julie A., Grow, Daniel R., and Wiczyk, Halina
- Subjects
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HIV-positive persons , *HUMAN fertility , *FERTILITY clinics - Abstract
Objective: To examine demand for, and access to, fertility services for HIV-positive patients in the United States.Design: An electronic survey.Setting: The URL for the Web-based survey was e-mailed to those surveyed.Patient(s): The 916 members of the Society of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine.Main Outcome Measure(s): Policy and practice in evaluation and treatment of HIV-positive and HIV-serodiscordant couples who desire conception, demand for services, and perceived barriers to providing these services.Result(s): The response rate was 22%. Forty percent of respondents reported policies. Fifty-one percent reported requests. Sixty-four percent reported offering treatment to HIV-serodiscordant couples, and 57% reported offering treatment to HIV-positive couples. Treatments most frequently offered to HIV-serodiscordant male-positive couples were reproductive surgery (50%), ovulation induction (46%), and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (45%). Twenty-nine percent of those offering treatment test-washed specimens for HIV. Factors limiting care included the following: low volume of requests (45%), concern for child welfare (37%), no laboratory policy (32%), and legal risk (32%).Conclusion(s): Patients who are HIV-positive are seeking fertility services in the United States. The small demand is a major limiting factor to provision of services. There is a lack of global application of current American Society of Reproductive Medicine guidelines. Provider education is needed to ensure that the safest reproductive services are offered to HIV-positive patients. Legal reform is imperative to improve access to reproductive services for the HIV-positive population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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