| Literature DB >> 31366670 |
Jayshree Dave1, John Paul2, Julie Johnson3, Jane Hutchinson4, Glenn Phiri5, Asha Dave6, Neville Verlander7, David Carrington8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: National guidelines for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in primary care exists but their management is uncertain. AIM: To assess the management of STIs against national standards in primary care. DESIGN &Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotics; Diagnosis; General practice; General practitioners; Sexually transmitted infections; Treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31366670 PMCID: PMC6662868 DOI: 10.3399/bjgpopen18X101639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJGP Open ISSN: 2398-3795
Responder answers to the question ‘Do you feel confident treating the following STIs? Or would you prefer to seek advice or refer for treatment?’ (n = 119)
| Type of STIs | I am confident treating, % ( | I would ask for advice, % ( | I would refer to the GUM clinic, % ( | Other (give details below), % ( | Response total, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlamydia | 83 (105) | 3 (4) | 11 (14) | 2 (3) | 126 |
| Genital gonorrhoea | 25 (32) | 22 (28) | 49 (63) | 4 (5) | 128 |
| Extragenital gonorrhoea | 4 (5) | 24 (30) | 69 (86) | 2 (3) | 124 |
| Trichomonas vaginalis | 64 (81) | 14 (17) | 21 (26) | 2 (2) | 126 |
| Genital warts | 22 (28) | 9 (11) | 66 (83) | 3 (4) | 126 |
| Genital herpes | 66 (82) | 11 (14) | 21 (26) | 2 (2) | 124 |
| Syphilis | 4 (5) | 21 (27) | 73 (92) | 2 (2) | 126 |
Proportions may not add up to 100 due to rounding of numbers
GUM = genito-urinary medicine. STI = sexually transmitted infection.
Responders’ indicators for testing for gonococcus in general practice
| What are the usual indicators for gonococcus testing in your practice? | |
|---|---|
| Patient requests the test | 95 (80) |
| Part of chlamydia screening | 89 (75) |
| High-risk patient | 85 (71) |
| Symptomatic, genital symptoms | 108 (91) |
| Symptomatic, extragenital symptoms | 42 (35) |
| Other, please specify | 7 (6) |
Responder answers to the question ‘What sample types do you routinely take for gonococcus testing?’ (n = 119)
| Sample type | Specimen for MC&S for gonorrhoea, % ( | Specimen for NAATs for gonorrhoea, % ( | Samples not routinely taken for gonorrhoea, % ( | Responses total, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urethral swab | 22 (28) | 14 (18) | 63 (79) | 125 |
| High vaginal swab | 42% (53) | 20 (25) | 38 (47) | 125 |
| Self-taken vulvovaginal swab | 23 (28) | 35 (43) | 42 (51) | 122 |
| Endocervical swab | 38 (47) | 36 (44) | 26 (32) | 123 |
| Throat swab | 9 (11) | 8 (10) | 82 (98) | 119 |
| Rectal swab | 10 (12) | 11 (13) | 79 (95) | 120 |
| First pass urine | 18 (22) | 35 (43) | 47 (57) | 122 |
Proportions may not add up to 100 due to rounding of numbers. NAAT = nucleic acid amplification test. MC&S = microscopy, culture and sensitivity
Figure 1.Responses to the question ‘Are you aware of any of the following sources of information on sexually transmitted infections and do you find them useful?’
GUM = genito-urinary medicine. STI = sexually transmitted infection.
Results regarding access to clinical advice, management of patients with gonococcal positive NAATs, and referral pathway for GUM
| GUM | 104 (87) |
| Primary care colleague | 30 (25) |
| Primary care facilitator | 1 (1) |
| Ask a colleague | 17 (14) |
| BNF | 39 (33) |
| Phone microbiologist | 33 (28) |
| Other, please specify | 4 (3) |
| Total responses, | 119 |
| Online electronic messaging service to lab consultants e.g. kinesis, email | 45 (42) |
| Advice embedded within electronic requesting (e.g. sample or test choice), or reporting (e.g. antibiotic choice) systems | 88 (83) |
| Information leaflet on the management of gonorrhoea | 31 (29) |
| Clinical advice by telephone on a positive result/confirmation | 66 (62) |
| Other, please specify | 7 (7) |
| Total responses, | 106 |
| Refer all patients | 83 (81) |
| Refer only complicated cases of infection to a GUM clinic | 16 (16) |
| Treat all patients at surgery | 4 (4) |
| Total responses, | 103 |
BNF = British National Formulary. GUM = genito-urinary medicine. HIV= human immunodeficiency virus. NAAT = nucleic acid amplification test. STI = sexually transmitted infection.