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Paper Title

Patient and Partner Perspectives on Patient-Delivered Partner Screening: Acceptability, Benefits, and Barriers

Keywords

  • Patient-Delivered Partner Screening (PDPS)
  • Expedited Partner Services (EPS)
  • Sexual Health
  • Partner Trust
  • STI Screening
  • Patient-Partner Relationship
  • PDPT Barriers
  • Sexual Partner Communication
  • Privacy Concerns
  • Screening Kit Packaging
  • STI Stigma
  • Health Convenience
  • Sexual Health Improvement
  • PDPS Challenges
  • Partner Trust Enhancement
  • Mixed-Methods Interviews

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 24 | Issue : 10 | Page No : 631 - 637

Published On

October, 2010

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Abstract

The study examined willingness to engage in patient-delivered partner screening (PDPS) and preferences for expedited partner services (EPS). Forty urban U.S. sexually transmitted infection (STI) clinic patients participated in individual mixed-methods interviews exploring EPS preferences and PDPS willingness. Most participants selected PDPS and PDPT together and uptake varied by patient–partner relationship closeness. For PDPS, several potentially important barriers and benefits were identified. Perceived benefits included improved sexual health for patients and their sexual partner(s) as well as convenience, privacy, and the potential to enhance trust between sexual partners. Perceived barriers included concerns about PDPS processes (e.g., time it would take to receive the result, risk of sample contamination), the accuracy of results, STI stigma and associated blame, lack of trust for a sexual partner, and the packaging/appearance of the screening kit. PDPS affords benefits and may overcome treatment barriers in some situations; however, it shares common PDPT barriers and has its own unique challenges. There are also concerns regarding how the offer of PDPS may interact with PDPT utilization.

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