| Literature DB >> 24016143 |
James Ward1, Skye McGregor, Rebecca J Guy, Alice R Rumbold, Linda Garton, Bronwyn J Silver, Debbie Taylor-Thomson, Belinda Hengel, Janet Knox, Amalie Dyda, Matthew G Law, Handan Wand, Basil Donovan, Christopher K Fairley, Steven Skov, Donna Ah Chee, John Boffa, David Glance, Robyn McDermott, Lisa Maher, John M Kaldor.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite two decades of interventions, rates of sexually transmissible infections (STI) in remote Australian Aboriginal communities remain unacceptably high. Routine notifications data from 2011 indicate rates of chlamydia and gonorrhoea among Aboriginal people in remote settings were 8 and 61 times higher respectively than in the non-Indigenous population. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24016143 PMCID: PMC3847940 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1STRIVE study process.
STI best practice indicators
| Proportion of Aboriginal patients aged 16–34 years old who have an annual test for chlamydia, gonorrhoea and trichomonas | 80% |
| Proportion of health service patients presenting with STI symptoms who receive immediate treatment | 95% |
| Proportion of people diagnosed by laboratory test with chlamydia, gonorrhoea or trichomonas who are treated within seven days of the test result being received from the laboratory | 80% |
| Proportion of patients found by laboratory test to have chlamydia, gonorrhoea or trichomonas who have a test for re-infection at between two to four months following treatment | 80% |
| Proportion of named sexual contacts, of people found to have chlamydia, gonorrhoea or trichomonas, tested and treated | 50% |
Tools, methods and description of information collected in the trial
| Site description assessment | • Conducted by regional STRIVE Coordinators at baseline and the start of each year in all health services | |
| • Updated annually with any contextual information that may impact on delivery of STI services | (i) Current sexual health activities, including health promotion activities | |
| Systems Assessment | • Conducted by regional STRIVE Coordinators annually in health services randomised to the SHQIP | |
| (i) Health hardware | ||
| (ii) Clinical services | ||
| (iii) Patient information systems | ||
| (iv) Health promotion | ||
| (v) Organizational commitment to sexual health | ||
| (vi) Surveillance and evaluation | ||
| Quantitative STI testing and clinical management data | • Collated from one or more of the following sources: | (i) Patient consultation data and associated demographics |
| (i) Health service patient information management systems | (ii) STI testing, retesting and treatment outcomes Laboratory test result | |
| (ii ) STI templates within patient management systems | ||
| (iii) Contact tracing forms | ||
| (iv) Laboratory data | ||
| • Extracted 6 monthly for all health services | ||
| STI prevalence assessment | • Each person attending the clinic aged 16-34 will be offered a STI screening test for all three STIs | (i) Prevalence of chlamydia, gonorrhoea and trichomonas in 16-34 year olds in STRIVE trial clusters |
| • 50 men and 50 women from each cluster will be included | ||
| • Takes place on an annual basis in all health services |