1. Use of a risk quiz to predict infection for sexually transmitted infections: a retrospective analysis of acceptability and positivity.
- Author
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Gaydos CA, Jett-Goheen M, Barnes M, Dize L, Barnes P, and Hsieh YH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Condoms, Diagnostic Self Evaluation, Female, Health Education, Humans, Male, Mass Screening psychology, Program Evaluation, Retrospective Studies, Self Care, Sexual Behavior psychology, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control, Sexually Transmitted Diseases psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States epidemiology, Mass Screening statistics & numerical data, Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques statistics & numerical data, Sexual Behavior statistics & numerical data, Sexually Transmitted Diseases transmission
- Abstract
Background: Individuals who are sexually active may want to make a decision as to whether they are at risk for having a sexually transmitted infection (STI) such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Trichomonas vaginalis. Our goal was to develop and evaluate a simple self-taken sexual risk quiz for participants, ordering an online STI self-collection test kit to determine whether the score predicted infection status., Methods: As part of the IWantTheKit programme for home sample self-collection for STIs, 2010-2013, the programme asked male and female users to voluntarily take a risk quiz. The six-question quiz was about risk behaviour and included an age question. Data analyses were stratified by gender as determined a priori. Scores 0-10 were stratified into risk groups for each gender based on similar risk score-specific STI prevalence. Retrospective analyses were performed to assess whether risk group predicted aggregate STI positivity. Urogenital/rectal mailed samples were tested by nucleic acid amplification tests., Results: More females (N=836) than males (N=558) provided voluntary risk scores. The percentage of eligible participants who submitted scores was 43.9% for both females and males. There was a higher STI infection rate in females (14.0%) than in males (7.0%) for having any STI (p<0.001). Multivariate logistic analysis for females, which controlled for age and race, demonstrated that a higher risk score group independently predicted risk for having an STI (OR of 2.2 for risk scores 5-7 and 4.2 OR for scores of 8-10). For males, the multivariate model, which controlled for race, indicated that no risk score group was associated having an STI., Conclusions: Results of a participant's own sexual risk quiz score independently predicted STI positivity for women, but not for men. Further study of this simple risk quiz is required., (Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/)
- Published
- 2016
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