HIV Management Guide for Clinical Care and ARV Guidelines

HIV Management Guide for Clinical Care and ARV Guidelines

Management

Quality of life, advance care planning and end-of-life decision-making

Nurses can promote the rights of PLHIV by encouraging and supporting them to plan for their future care needs and treatment wishes, especially regarding end-of-life care and quality of life.    The meaning of ‘quality of life’ is personal and unique to everyone, encompassing physical, psychological, and social domains.  It is now included as a goal …

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Emerging issues and their ethical implications – Pre Exposure Prophylaxis

Nurses are increasingly involved in biomedical HIV prevention including the provision of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).  PrEP is the use of antiretroviral drugs taken by HIV-negative people to prevent HIV infection (see PrEP for Prevention and Biomedical prevention add link section of this resource).    As with any clinical innovation, the ethical implications of PrEP are important …

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HIV and ethics – Case example

A 32-year-old man was diagnosed with HIV infection 9 months ago, after presenting to a sexual health clinic for a routine sexual health screen. He attends the nursing clinic for HIV monitoring and has an undetectable viral load. You update his health history and note he is taking antiretroviral medication. You also take a sexual health …

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Conclusion

Ethics is at the heart of HIV nursing and midwifery, and both professions have been at the forefront of ethical practice since the start of the epidemic (50-52).  Nurses and midwives must be educationally prepared and capable of contributing to and making sound moral decisions based on evidence and careful ethical deliberation.  There is a …

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References

Johnstone M-J. and Crock E. Chapter 10: Dealing with ethical issues in nursing practice. In: Chang E, Daly J, eds. Transitions in Nursing: preparing for professional practice. 5th ed. Sydney: Elsevier; 2019. Beauchamp TL, Childress JF. Principles of Biomedical Ethics. 8th ed. New York: Oxford University Press; 2019. Johnstone M. Bioethics: a nursing perspective. 8th …

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Evolving roles of nurses in HIV care

Danielle Collins: HIV nurse practitioner, Victorian HIV Service, Infectious Diseases Department, Alfred Hospital Acknowledgement: Emily Wheeler: Australasian Society for HIV, Viral Hepatitis and Sexual Health Medicine (ASHM) co-authored the first edition of this section.    Nurses have been involved in varying capacities in supporting people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) since the beginning of the HIV epidemic in the 1980s. …

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National context

Nurses, alongside doctors, allied health professionals and peer workers, working at the forefront of HIV care in Australia in the early years of the epidemic, faced a highly politicised and stigmatising landscape given the nature of the illness and the already marginalised affected population. (1) With no precedents, the HIV nursing models that emerged were …

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Principles

The principles underpinning nursing in this specialty sector have been translated into practice standards by the Australasian Sexual Health and HIV Nurses Association (ASHHNA). (9) These standards were developed and updated, by referencing current national and international sexual health and HIV nursing competency and practice standards. The standards account for differences in practice for both …

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International context

There are vast differences between HIV nursing models nationally and internationally due to epidemiological variability, differences in health system infrastructure including the scope of nursing practice and access to resources worldwide. The models of care that exist reflect the need of the population they were developed for and change according to the needs of that population.     …

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