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Screening Males for Chlamydial Infection Through Community Based Organizations and Street Outreach. Kees Rietmeijer, MD, MSPH Stewart Thomas Denver Public Health. Definitions. Community based organizations (CBOs)
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Screening Males for Chlamydial Infection ThroughCommunity Based Organizations and Street Outreach Kees Rietmeijer, MD, MSPH Stewart Thomas Denver Public Health
Definitions • Community based organizations (CBOs) • Non-profit organizations who provide facility-based services to youth at high risk for STDs and who traditionally do not provide STD-related services • Street outreach • Non-profit organizations who provide street-based services to youth at high risk for STDs
Two Models for Collaboration • Integration of STD screening within the package of routinely offered services conducted by CBO/Outreach staff • Offering STD screening on a regular basis as an add-on service (e.g, “Pee Drives”) conducted by or with assistance of project staff
Denver • CBOs • Project-staffed “Pee-drives” at a number of organizations serving at-risk youth • Out of school activities, e.g., The Spot • Street Outreach • Focus on homeless youth in collaboration with and staffed by a CBO serving this population (Urban Peak)
San Francisco • CBOs • Pee drives during neighborhood street fairs and community college health fairs • Pee drives at Pacific Islander Wellness Centers • Outreach • Project Yuthe: Peer youth outreach into neighborhoods with high-prevalence • Outreach day laborers
Seattle • CBOs • Non-profit organizations serving families and runaways/homeless youth • Outreach • Mobile van
CBO/Street outreachDelivering partner services • Who performs partner services for Ct infections identified through CBO/street outreach activities? • Baltimore—DOH DIS • Denver—Project staff • San Francisco—DOH DIS • Seattle—School clinic staff (nurse)
CBO/Street outreachAcceptability Eligible Approached Accepted% CBOs Denver 112 80 26 32.5 Seattle 72 45 62.5 Outreach Denver 50 45 8 18.0 Seattle 33 7 21
CBO/Street outreachTesting Data Screened CT+ (%) Treated (%) Interval CBOs Denver 271 25 (9.2) 23 (92) 9.1 (0 - 43) San Francisco 1119 13 (1.2) 10 (77) Seattle 72 1 (1.4) 1 (1.0) 14 Outreach Denver 212 26 (12.3) 18 (69) 5.1 (0 - 22) San Francisco 196 7 (3.6) 7 (1.0) Seattle 33 0 0 0
CBO/Street outreachChallenges and obstacles • Staff generally not trained in taking sexual histories and providing STD services • Provider and client often reluctant to discuss sexual issues • Providers may forget to offer testing when busy • Testing often offered in group setting • Embarrassment on side of both provider and client • Transient population
CBO/Street outreachFacilitators • More time to interact with clients to • Explain the risks of CT infection • Benefits of testing • Assure confidentiality • Reminders on client charts / encounter forms • Better training for providers (role for PT centers?) • Incentives for clients (e.g., Soda’s, Penlights, McDonalds’ coupons) • Incentives for providers (books, movie tickets, etc.)
CBO/Street outreachSummary • Potential of reaching hard-to-reach populations • Supported by CT prevalence data from this project • Importance of identifying, educating, and training local staff • Success is often dependent on the presence of a local “champion” at the site • Role of targeted training opportunities? Incentives? • How to sustain the collaboration? • Data feed-back • Developing and maintaining “nurturing” relationships between health departments and participating CBOs
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