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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2012

Open Access 01-12-2012 | Research article

A pragmatic assessment of the relative efficiency of outreach chlamydia screening events conducted in non-clinical settings

Authors: Francis J Bowden, Marian J Currie, Muareen Todkill, Mathias Schmidt, Sue Webeck, Rendry Del Rosario, Tim Bavinton, Alexandra Tyson

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2012

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Abstract

Background

Opportunistic screening for chlamydia in non-clinical settings is becoming more common, but little is known about which settings (or events) offer the best return on investment. We measured the relative efficiency of each screening site and event during the conduct of a chlamydia education and screening outreach program which used a cash incentive to encourage participation (SOC2).

Methods

SOC2 staff identified sites and organised events in non-clinical sites where young people were likely to congregate. 16 to 30 years olds were offered chlamydia education and a cash reward of AUD10 if they chose to be screened for chlamydia. Data collected during these activities were used to calculated five measures of efficiency: i) screening yield’ (proportion of people providing a sample), ii) proportion of positive tests, iii) ‘event screening tempo’ (number of screens performed for every hour that screening is offered), iv) ‘staff hour screening tempo’ (number of screens performed per hour of staff time) and v) ‘chlamydia detection tempo’ (number of positive tests detected per hour of screening).

Results

3011 people (71% male) were screened during 18 events at 10 venues. Overall ‘screening yield’ was 43.8% (range: 20–77%) and 1.7% (95% CI: 1.1–3.0) of tests were positive (by event range 1–3%). Overall, the ‘event screening tempo’ was 23.7 screens per event hour (range 8.0–79.0), the ‘staff hour screening tempo’ was 6.5 screens per staff hour and the ‘chlamydia detection tempo’ was 0.4 positive tests per hour (range: 0–1.75).

Conclusion

Assessing the efficiency of screening sites and programs should be integral to their conduct. We suggest the use of five measures to enable pragmatic assessment of any screening program. We introduce the terms ‘event screening tempo’, ‘staff hour screening tempo’ and ‘chlamydia detection tempo’ to describe three of these simple measures.
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Metadata
Title
A pragmatic assessment of the relative efficiency of outreach chlamydia screening events conducted in non-clinical settings
Authors
Francis J Bowden
Marian J Currie
Muareen Todkill
Mathias Schmidt
Sue Webeck
Rendry Del Rosario
Tim Bavinton
Alexandra Tyson
Publication date
01-12-2012
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2012
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-341

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