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Table 1 Respondent and practice characteristics

From: What do primary care staff know and do about blood borne virus testing and care for migrant patients? A national survey

 

Overall

 

Number (%)

95% CI

1a: Respondent characteristics

 Position

General Practitioner (GP)

165 (39.9)

35.3–44.6

Nurse

202 (48.8)

44.0–53.6

Practice Manager

29 (7.0)

4.9–9.9

Other clinical

6 (1.4)

0.7–3.1

Other non-clinical

7 (1.7)

0.8–3.4

Not stated

5 (1.2)

0.5–2.8

Total responses

414

 

 Frequency of seeing migrant patients

Frequently

108 (34.1)

29.1–39.4

Sometimes

103 (32.5)

27.6–37.8

Rarely

106 (33.4)

28.5–38.8

Total responses

317

 

1b: Practice characteristics

 Location

East of England

36 (8.7)

6.3–11.8

London

63 (15.2)

12.1–19.0

Midlands

86 (20.8)

17.1–24.9

North East

23 (5.6)

3.7–8.2

North West

60 (14.5)

11.4–18.2

South East

65 (15.7)

12.5–19.5

South West

30 (7.2)

5.1–10.2

Yorkshire & the Humber

51 (12.3)

9.5–15.8

Total responses

414

 

 Size of practice

Small (0–5279 patients)

39 (25.8)

19.5–33.3

Medium (5280–9299 patients)

42 (27.8)

21.3–35.4

Large (> = 9300 patients)

70 (46.4)

38.6–54.3

Total responses

151

 

 Proportion of practice population that are new migrants

Low (0–9%)

40 (50.6)

39.8–61.4

Medium (10–24% patients)

25 (31.6)

22.4–42.5

High (25–49% patients)

4 (5.1)

2.0–12.3

Very high (50–100% patients)

10 (12.7)

7.0–21.8

Total responses

79

 

 Proportion of practice population that are asylum seekers/refugees

Low (0–9%)

57 (76.0)

65.2–84.2

Medium (10–24% patients)

7 (9.3)

4.6–18.0

High (25–49% patients)

3 (4.0)

1.4–11.1

Very high (50–100% patients)

8 (10.7)

5.5–19.7

Total responses

75

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