| Literature DB >> 32897134 |
Katherine S Elkington1, Anne Spaulding2, Sheena Gardner3, Danica Knight4, Steven Belenko5, Jennifer E Becan4, Angela A Robertson3, Carrie Oser6, Ralph DiClemente2,7.
Abstract
Justice-involved youth are at high risk for HIV and STIs, and justice agencies are uniquely poised to offer HIV/STI testing. However, testing in these settings is not routine and represents a missed opportunity. This study describes a system-level implementation intervention designed to increase access to HIV/STI testing through juvenile justice (JJ) and public health agency collaboration across six counties in six states in the United States. Local change teams, active facilitation, and training were utilized to facilitate agency partnerships and development of HIV/STI practice change protocols. Five counties established health and JJ partnerships and four counties successfully implemented their protocols. Sites with HIV/STI education and testing protocols behaviorally screened 98.5% of youth and tested 41.2% of those youth; 0% were HIV+ and 43.2% had an STI. The intervention provides a feasible, scalable solution, through promoting partnerships between JJ and health agencies, to link youth to testing and treatment services.Entities:
Keywords: HIV/STI testing; adolescents; implementation; juvenile justice; system-level intervention
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32897134 PMCID: PMC9426765 DOI: 10.1521/aeap.2020.32.4.337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Educ Prev ISSN: 0899-9546