Abstract

BackgroundSexually transmissible infections (STIs), such as gonorrhoea and chlamydia, are highly prevalent, particularly in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities in Australia. In these settings, due to distance to centralised laboratories, the return of laboratory test results can take a week or longer, and many young people do not receive treatment, or it is considerably delayed. Point-of-care testing (POCT) provides an opportunity for same day diagnosis and treatment. Molecular POC testing for STIs was available at 31 regional or remote primary health care clinic sites through the Test-Treat-And-GO (TANGO2) program. This qualitative study sought to identify barriers and facilitators to further scaling up STI POCT in remote Aboriginal communities within Australia.MethodsA total of 15 healthcare workers (including nurses and Aboriginal health practitioners) and five managers (including clinic coordinators and practice managers) were recruited from remote health services involved in the TTANGO2 program to participate in semi-structured in-depth interviews. Health services’ clinics were purposively selected to include those with high or low STI POCT uptake. Personnel participants were selected via a hybrid approach including nomination by clinic managers and purposive sampling to include those in roles relevant to STI testing and treatment and those who had received TTANGO2 training for POCT technology. Milat’s scaling up guide informed the coding framework and analysis.ResultsAcceptability of STI POCT technology among healthcare workers and managers was predominantly influenced by self-efficacy and perceived effectiveness of POCT technology as well as perceptions of additional workload burden associated with POCT. Barriers to integration of STI POCT included retention of trained staff to conduct POCT. Patient reach (including strategies for patient engagement) was broadly considered an enabler for STI testing scale up using POCT technology.ConclusionsRemote healthcare clinics should be supported by both program and clinic management throughout scaling up efforts to ensure broad acceptability of STI POCT as well as addressing local health systems’ issues and identifying and enhancing opportunities for patient engagement.

Highlights

  • Transmissible infections (STIs), such as gonorrhoea and chlamydia, are highly prevalent, in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities in Australia

  • Remote healthcare clinics should be supported by both program and clinic management throughout scaling up efforts to ensure broad acceptability of Sexually transmissible infections (STI) Point-of-care testing (POCT) as well as addressing local health systems’ issues and identifying and enhancing opportunities for patient engagement

  • Interviews were undertaken with a range of healthcare workers including Aboriginal Health Practitioners (AHP) (n = 8), Registered Nurses (RN) (n = 7), service coordinators (n = 2), and practice/clinic managers (n = 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Transmissible infections (STIs), such as gonorrhoea and chlamydia, are highly prevalent, in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities in Australia In these settings, due to distance to centralised laboratories, the return of laboratory test results can take a week or longer, and many young people do not receive treatment, or it is considerably delayed. In high-income countries, laboratory-based testing is available, but there are significant delays within many remote communities to receive results, hindering timely treatment and public health responses [11]. In these settings, point-ofcare testing (POCT) may be advantageous for etiological diagnosis [12, 13]. Due to the advancing technology of STI POCT, and the ongoing epidemic of treatable STIs, there has been a recent call to action for health systems integration of STI POCT [22]

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