Literature DB >> 24015829

Talk or text to tell? How young adults in Canada and South Africa prefer to receive STI results, counseling, and treatment updates in a wireless world.

Lukas Labacher1, Claudia Mitchell.   

Abstract

Young adults often lack access to confidential, long-lasting, and nonjudgmental interactions with sexual health professionals at brick-and-mortar clinics. To ensure that patients return for their STI test results, post-result counseling, and STI-related information, computer-mediated health intervention programming allows them to receive sexual health information through onsite computers, the Internet, and mobile phone calls and text messages. To determine whether young adults (age: M = 21 years) prefer to communicate with health professionals about the status of their sexual health through computer-mediated communication devices, 303 second-year university students (183 from an urban North American university and 120 from a periurban university in South Africa) completed a paper-based survey indicating how they prefer to communicate with doctors and nurses: talking face to face, mobile phone call, text message, Internet chat programs, Facebook, Twitter, or e-mail. Nearly all students, and female students in South Africa in particular, prefer to receive their STI test results, post-results counseling, and STI-related information by talking face to face with doctors and nurses rather than communicating through computers or mobile phones. Results are clarified in relation to gender, availability of various technologies, and prevalence of HIV in Canada and in South Africa.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24015829     DOI: 10.1080/10810730.2013.798379

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Commun        ISSN: 1081-0730


  7 in total

1.  Adolescents' Perspectives on Using Technology for Health: Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Ana Radovic; Carolyn A McCarty; Katherine Katzman; Laura P Richardson
Journal:  JMIR Pediatr Parent       Date:  2018-03-14

Review 2.  Clients' perceptions and experiences of targeted digital communication accessible via mobile devices for reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health: a qualitative evidence synthesis.

Authors:  Heather Mr Ames; Claire Glenton; Simon Lewin; Tigest Tamrat; Eliud Akama; Natalie Leon
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2019-10-14

Review 3.  Arguments for and against HIV self-testing.

Authors:  Brian R Wood; Carl Ballenger; Joanne D Stekler
Journal:  HIV AIDS (Auckl)       Date:  2014-08-02

4.  Mixed-methods evaluation of a novel online STI results service.

Authors:  Jo Gibbs; Catherine R H Aicken; Lorna J Sutcliffe; Voula Gkatzidou; Laura J Tickle; Kate Hone; S Tariq Sadiq; Pam Sonnenberg; Claudia S Estcourt
Journal:  Sex Transm Infect       Date:  2018-01-11       Impact factor: 3.519

5.  Determinants of use of mobile phones for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) education and prevention among adolescents and young adult population in Ghana: implications of public health policy and interventions design.

Authors:  Robert Kaba Alhassan; Abdulai Abdul-Fatawu; Belinda Adzimah-Yeboah; Worlali Nyaledzigbor; Samuel Agana; Prudence Portia Mwini-Nyaledzigbor
Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2019-08-09       Impact factor: 3.223

6.  Tweet content related to sexually transmitted diseases: no joking matter.

Authors:  Elia Gabarron; J Artur Serrano; Rolf Wynn; Annie Y S Lau
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2014-10-06       Impact factor: 5.428

7.  The eClinical Care Pathway Framework: a novel structure for creation of online complex clinical care pathways and its application in the management of sexually transmitted infections.

Authors:  Jo Gibbs; Lorna J Sutcliffe; Voula Gkatzidou; Kate Hone; Richard E Ashcroft; Emma M Harding-Esch; Catherine M Lowndes; S Tariq Sadiq; Pam Sonnenberg; Claudia S Estcourt
Journal:  BMC Med Inform Decis Mak       Date:  2016-07-22       Impact factor: 2.796

  7 in total

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