Formalizing Partnerships: How Regional Coalitions in Sexual Health Can Address the STI Epidemic.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Gillian J Lee, Karen A Wendel, Adrean Riba, Lawrence Weingarten, Anne Trolard, Teri S Anderson, Helen Burnside, Hilary Reno
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract: Background: STI rates continue to increase nationally with more STIs diagnosed outside of traditional STI clinics. Collective impact groups that harness the power of collaboration among diverse community stakeholders have had demonstrated success in supporting local efforts in HIV prevention and addressing specific community gaps. We describe the efforts of two jurisdictional collective impact groups, the St. Louis STI Regional Response Coalition (STIRR) and the Denver Metro STI Coalition (DMSC), to combat their regional STI epidemics.Methods: STIRR and DMSC serve multiple counties (STIRR 12; DMSC 5) and have diverse member organizations including health departments, academic medical and community health centers, and community-based organizations (STIRR 25; DMSC 22). They also have a broad membership base (STIRR 50; DMSC 107). Coordination of these groups is supported by state and institutional funding as well as by staff from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention regional STI Clinical Prevention Training Centers.Results: STIRR and DMSC outcomes include assessments of client STI services, consultation on health department STI data dashboards, development of regional prevention strategies, dissemination of standards of care and best practices for providers, and collaboration with local HIV prevention Fast Track Cities Initiatives. Products to support healthcare staff and community members in STI prevention and care are posted on each group's website.Conclusions: STIRR and DMSC demonstrate the feasibility of utilizing the collective impact model to address jurisdictional STI epidemics. Expansion of community engagement and sustained funding are needed to fully realize the potential of such collaborative groups in addressing the U.S. STI epidemic.

正式确立伙伴关系:性健康区域联盟如何应对性传播感染流行。
摘要:背景:在全国范围内,随着越来越多的性传播感染在传统性传播感染诊所之外被诊断出来,性传播感染发病率持续上升。利用不同社区利益相关者之间的协作力量的集体影响团体在支持当地艾滋病毒预防工作和解决特定社区差距方面取得了成功。我们描述了两个辖区集体影响团体,圣路易斯性传播感染区域应对联盟(STIRR)和丹佛地铁性传播感染联盟(DMSC)为打击其区域性传播感染流行病所做的努力。方法:STIRR和DMSC服务多个县(STIRR 12;DMSC 5),并拥有不同的成员组织,包括卫生部门、学术医疗和社区卫生中心以及社区组织(STIRR 25;DMSC 22)。他们也有广泛的成员基础(STIRR 50;DMSC 107)。这些小组的协调工作得到国家和机构资金以及疾病控制和预防中心区域性传播感染临床预防培训中心工作人员的支持。结果:STIRR和DMSC的成果包括评估客户性传播感染服务,就卫生部门性传播感染数据仪表板进行咨询,制定区域预防战略,传播护理标准和提供者最佳做法,以及与当地艾滋病毒预防快速通道城市倡议合作。支持卫生保健人员和社区成员预防和护理性传播感染的产品发布在每个小组的网站上。结论:STIRR和DMSC证明了利用集体影响模型解决辖区性传播感染流行病的可行性。需要扩大社区参与并持续提供资金,以充分发挥此类合作团体在解决美国性传播感染流行病方面的潜力。
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来源期刊
Sexually transmitted diseases
Sexually transmitted diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
16.10%
发文量
289
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: ​Sexually Transmitted Diseases, the official journal of the American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association​, publishes peer-reviewed, original articles on clinical, laboratory, immunologic, epidemiologic, behavioral, public health, and historical topics pertaining to sexually transmitted diseases and related fields. Reports from the CDC and NIH provide up-to-the-minute information. A highly respected editorial board is composed of prominent scientists who are leaders in this rapidly changing field. Included in each issue are studies and developments from around the world.
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