Goyal Monika K, Teach Stephen J, Badolato Gia M, Trent Maria, Chamberlain James M
Children's National Health System, Washington, DC; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC.
Children's National Health System, Washington, DC; Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC.
J Pediatr. 2016 Apr;171:128-32. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.01.019. Epub 2016 Feb 2.
To evaluate acceptance of sexually transmitted infection (STI) screening and measure STI prevalence in an asymptomatic adolescent emergency department (ED) population.
This was a prospectively enrolled cross-sectional study of 14- to 21-year-old patients who sought care at an urban pediatric ED with non-STI related complaints. Participants completed a computer-assisted questionnaire to collect demographic and behavioral data and were asked to provide a urine sample to screen for Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae infection. We calculated STI screening acceptance and STI prevalence. We used logistic regression to identify factors associated with screening acceptance and presence of infection.
Of 553 enrolled patients, 326 (59.0%) agreed to be screened for STIs. STI screening acceptability was associated with having public health insurance (aOR 1.7; 1.1, 2.5) and being sexually active (sexually active but denying high risk activity [aOR 1.7; 1.1, 2.5]; sexually active and reporting high risk activity [aOR 2.6; 1.5, 4.6]). Sixteen patients (4.9%; 95% CI 2.6, 7.3) had an asymptomatic STI. High-risk sexual behavior (aOR 7.2; 1.4, 37.7) and preferential use of the ED rather than primary care for acute medical needs (aOR 4.0; 1.3, 12.3) were associated with STI.
STI screening is acceptable to adolescents in the ED, especially among those who declare sexual experience. Overall, there was a low prevalence of asymptomatic STI. Risk of STI was higher among youth engaging in high-risk sexual behavior and those relying on the ED for acute health care access. Targeted screening interventions may be more efficient than universal screening for STI detection in the ED.
评估无症状青少年急诊科人群对性传播感染(STI)筛查的接受程度,并测量STI患病率。
这是一项前瞻性纳入的横断面研究,研究对象为14至21岁因非STI相关主诉到城市儿科急诊科就诊的患者。参与者完成一份计算机辅助问卷以收集人口统计学和行为数据,并被要求提供尿液样本以筛查沙眼衣原体和淋病奈瑟菌感染。我们计算了STI筛查接受率和STI患病率。我们使用逻辑回归来确定与筛查接受率和感染存在相关的因素。
在553名登记患者中,326名(59.0%)同意接受STI筛查。STI筛查可接受性与拥有公共医疗保险(调整后比值比[aOR]1.7;1.1,2.5)和有性行为(有性行为但否认有高风险行为[aOR 1.7;1.1,2.5];有性行为且报告有高风险行为[aOR 2.6;1.5,4.6])相关。16名患者(4.9%;95%置信区间[CI]2.6,7.3)有无症状STI。高风险性行为(aOR 7.2;1.4,37.7)和在急性医疗需求时优先选择急诊科而非初级保健(aOR 4.0;1.3,12.3)与STI相关。
急诊科青少年可接受STI筛查,尤其是那些声明有性经历的青少年。总体而言,无症状STI的患病率较低。从事高风险性行为的青少年以及依赖急诊科获取急性医疗服务的青少年感染STI的风险更高。在急诊科进行针对性筛查干预可能比普遍筛查在检测STI方面更有效。