4.4 Article

Integrated syphilis/HIV screening in China: a qualitative analysis

Journal

BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-58

Keywords

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Funding

  1. China Syphilis Working Group
  2. UNC Fogarty AIDS International Research and Training Program (NIH FIC) [D43 TW01039]
  3. UNC Social Science Research on HIV/AIDS in China (NIH NICHD) [R24 HD056670-01]
  4. WHO Rapid Syphilis Test Project (WHO) [OD/TS-08-00088]
  5. American Society for Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Postdoctoral Fellowship
  6. Harvard Initiative for Global Health
  7. US NIH Fogarty Institute

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Background: The last decade has seen enormous advances in HIV treatment and care, but how to implement scaled up HIV testing, prevention, and treatment in low-income areas still presents a formidable public health challenge. South China faces expanding syphilis and sexually transmitted HIV epidemics, but health systems characteristics important for scaling up syphilis and HIV testing have not been defined. Methods: A purposive sample to ensure public, private, and public-private hybrid STI clinic inclusion was selected in a South China city. Eight key informant interviews were conducted with the STI clinic manager, followed by eight focus group discussions with physicians. Data collection relied on a semi-structured format that included questions in each of the following domains: 1) clinical facilities; 2) laboratory capacity with a focus on syphilis/HIV diagnosis; 3) clinic personnel; 4) physical space with a focus on locations to disclose confidential results; 5) financial support. Results: Public STI clinics had free syphilis testing/treatment and laboratory facilities to perform essential syphilis and HIV tests. However, despite serving a large number of STI patients, private STI clinics lacked nontreponemal syphilis testing, HIV testing, and had fewer connections to the public health infrastructure. Formally trained assistant physicians were 2.5 times as common as physicians at STI clinics. Only one of the 8 sites had onsite voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) services available. Conclusion: These STI case studies reveal the potential for expanding integrated syphilis/HIV services at public STI clinics in China. More health services research is needed to guide scale-up of syphilis/HIV testing in China.

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