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There is room to improve the diagnosis of PID
| I think anything that helps you in the diagnosis of PID is going to be good, really. Because we’ve, sort of, learnt to deal with it, but it’s not ideal. I mean, we’ve learnt to manage it in our own way. But we don’t have good tools to do that. #1 (Female/50-59/Sexual Health Clinic/VIC) |
| It would be great to have another tool […] because it always feels like an uncertain diagnosis #2 (Female/30-39/General Practice/TAS) |
| I’ve been in this field forever and I guess I am pretty confident in my diagnosis of PID, but we see all these horror stories coming from other places where things are missed and tests aren’t done properly […] and one of my real issues is, we have a very high rate of appendicectomies in young girls that present to our emergency departments with abdominal pain. Nobody even asks them if they’re having sex, they just rip their appendix out and then they find […] all this peritoneal fluid and sometimes send it off and find that the person’s got PID but they’ve had their appendix ripped out for no good reason. Just without assessment, and that happens a lot, I can tell you. #11 (Female/50-59/Sexual Health Clinic/WA) |
| I think it would certainly be of value in places like remote area health, where PID is a diagnosis that’s often missed in remote areas. I know there’s been studies done on that before. #10 (Female/40-49/Sexual Health Clinic/ACT) |
| Out in rural Australia or something, where you can’t get people who’ve got a lot of experience to work. You know, you could maybe have a more junior person who doesn’t have a great deal of experience […] and nurse practitioners and other people who don’t necessarily have a lot of experience with PID […] it would be particularly good in those situations. #1 (Female/50-59/Sexual Health Clinic/VIC) |
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A test could assist clinicians with diagnosis, but wouldn’t replace clinical judgement
| I think I would be more comfortable about my diagnosis #2 (Female/30-39/General Practice/TAS) |
| If they had the classic symptoms of PID, it would probably be useful […] just to be able to confirm your diagnosis. #4 (Female/40-49/General Practice/QLD & NT) |
| I think, to be honest, I’d probably continue the treatment if I had really clinically thought they had it, despite a negative test. That would depend on how good your test was, I guess. #7 (Female/50-59/General Practice/NSW) |
| I still don’t think that if you had a clinically severe PID, that you would let a negative test stop you from treating. But, yeah, that positive test in a borderline patient would be really useful. #8 (Female/30-39/General Practice & Sexual Health Clinic/QLD) |
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Impact of a test on time to treatment
| The other really important part of it would be the, how quick the turnaround is I guess, because if the test, you know, take a few days then it will be, I guess I will say not useful at all. Because usually we’ll treat them immediately. So it would have to be a test that’s quite quick. #6 (Male/30-39/Sexual Health Clinic/NSW) |
| If it’s definitely that [a point of care test], then you save the cost and inconvenience of going for an ultrasound or any delay, that would be a game changer. Absolutely. We love that stuff. As would every emergency department in Australia, and around the world. #7 (Female/50-59/General Practice/NSW) |
| If you’re not suspecting acute infective PID, then you can go ahead and treat their chronic pain more effectively a lot earlier. Because some of these girls do get bounced from acute department to acute department, never getting to the actual real underlying cause because we’re all treating defensively. #3 (Female/50-59/General Practice/NSW) |
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The patient experience is an important consideration for clinicians
| If it [the swab] had some particular, you know, pipe cleaner wire structure to it that was particularly unpleasant, I’d think I’d want to know about that. #7 (Female/50-59/General Practice/NSW) |
| It feels very contradictory in front of a patient as well when you’ve really decided strongly to do something and then a test will contradict you, and then you’re trying to explain, “yeah, but the test isn’t 100% [accurate]”, and they’re thinking well, “why did you do that anyway then? What’s the point?” #3 (Female/50-59/General Practice/NSW) |
| My patients in the sexual health clinic wouldn’t be able to pay anything majority of the time, because we’re looking at a very different demographic than I have in my private clinic which is mostly private-billing patients. Usually, for most of my patients, a test $50 and under, I could easily convince without much of an issue. #8 (Female/30-39/General Practice & Sexual Health Clinic/QLD) |