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Sexual health service adaptations to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Australia: a nationwide online survey

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Date

Authors

Phillips, Tiffany R
Fairley, Christopher K
Donovan, Basil
Ong, Jason J
McNulty, Anna
Marshall, Lewis
Templeton, David J
Owen, Louise
Ward, Alison
Gunathilake, Manoji

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia

Abstract

Objective: Examine the changes in service delivery Australian public sexual health clinics made to remain open during lockdown. Methods: A cross-sectional survey designed and delivered on Qualtrics was emailed to 21 directors of public sexual health clinics across Australia from July-August 2020 and asked about a variety of changes to service delivery. Descriptive statistics were calculated. Results: Twenty clinics participated, all remained open and reported service changes, including suspension of walk-in services in eight clinics. Some clinics stopped offering asymptomatic screening for varying patient populations. Most clinics transitioned to a mix of telehealth and face-to-face consultations. Nineteen clinics reported delays in testing and 13 reported limitations in testing. Most clinics changed to phone consultations for HIV medication refills (n=15) and eleven clinics prescribed longer repeat prescriptions. Fourteen clinics had staff redeployed to assist the COVID-19 response. Conclusion: Public sexual health clinics pivoted service delivery to reduce risk of COVID-19 transmission in clinical settings, managed staffing reductions and delays in molecular testing, and maintained a focus on urgent and symptomatic STI presentations and those at higher risk of HIV/STI acquisition. Implications for public health: Further research is warranted to understand what impact reduced asymptomatic screening may have had on community STI transmission.

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Citation

Source

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health

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Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License

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