改善初级保健机构中青少年和年轻成年男性的性传播感染筛查。

IF 1.2 Q3 PEDIATRICS
Pediatric quality & safety Pub Date : 2025-05-14 eCollection Date: 2025-05-01 DOI:10.1097/pq9.0000000000000807
Jessica Addison, Ramy Yim, Ben Ethier, Maria Alfieri, Lydia A Shrier, Allison Pellitier, Susan Fitzgerald, Gabriela Vargas, Josh Borus
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在美国,青少年和年轻成人(AYAs)约占所有新诊断的性传播感染(STIs)的一半。筛查AYA男性对于阻止感染传播以及预防长期后遗症至关重要。虽然我们的AYA医疗实践一直以每年超过80%的比率筛查AYA女性,但男性的基线筛查率低于70%。方法:在2021年5月至2023年10月期间,我们对过去3年内每年进行体检的15岁以上男性初级保健患者进行了质量改进计划。干预措施包括在浴室添加一个标志,明确指出尿液不会用于药物测试,并在所有男性医疗就诊的电子健康记录中创建和实施衣原体和淋病(GC/CT)测试警报。我们的主要结局是接受GC/CT筛查的患者百分比。结果:统计过程控制p图分析显示AYA男性在初级保健中GC/CT筛查率提高的特殊原因变化,包括在我们的第二次干预后平均筛查率从73.5%显著增加到83.5%,表明与先前结果的平均转变。结论:临床层面的干预措施——卫生间标识表明尿液不会用于药物检测——并没有提高性病筛查率,而电子健康记录提示临床工作人员关于性病检测的需要——提高了初级保健中AYA男性的GC/CT筛查率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Improving STI Screening in Adolescent and Young Adult Men in a Primary Care Setting.

Introduction: Adolescents and young adults (AYAs) account for approximately half of all new diagnoses of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the United States. Screening AYA men is imperative to stopping the spread of infection as well as preventing long-term sequelae. Although our AYA medical practice has consistently screened AYA women at rates more than 80% annually, the baseline screening rate for men was less than 70%.

Methods: Between May 2021 and October 2023, we conducted a quality improvement initiative among male primary care patients older than 15 years who had an annual physical within the past 3 years. Interventions included adding a bathroom sign clearly stating urine would not be used for drug testing and creating and implementing a chlamydia and gonorrhea (GC/CT) testing alert in the electronic health record for all male medical visits. Our primary outcome was the percentage of patients who received GC/CT screening.

Results: Statistical process control p-chart analysis showed special cause variation with improved GC/CT screening rates among AYA men in primary care, including a significant increase in the mean screening rate from 73.5% to 83.5% following our second intervention, demonstrating a mean shift from previous results.

Conclusions: Clinic-level interventions-bathroom signage indicating urine would not be used for drug testing did not improve STI screening rates, whereas an electronic health record prompt for clinic staff regarding the need for STI testing-improved GC/CT screening rates among AYA men in primary care.

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CiteScore
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