Repeated school-based screening for sexually transmitted diseases: A feasible strategy for reaching adolescents

Citation
Da. Cohen et al., Repeated school-based screening for sexually transmitted diseases: A feasible strategy for reaching adolescents, PEDIATRICS, 104(6), 1999, pp. 1281-1285
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Pediatrics,"Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
PEDIATRICS
ISSN journal
00314005 → ACNP
Volume
104
Issue
6
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1281 - 1285
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-4005(199912)104:6<1281:RSSFST>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Objectives. To determine whether repeated school-based screening and treatm ent for chlamydia and gonorrhea will decrease the prevalence of infection a mong students. Design. At three high schools serving over 2000 students, all 9th through 1 2th grade students were given the opportunity to be tested during three con secutive school years for chlamydia and gonorrhea, using urine ligase chain reaction tests. Five comparable schools with 5063 students enrolled served as wait-listed controls. Setting. Eight urban public high schools in Louisiana. Participants. Annually, 52% to 65% of all enrolled students participated; a mong those enrolled in schools for greater than or equal to 2 years, 83.4% of students were tested at least once. Intervention. Education of all students; counseling and treatment of infect ed students with oral single-dose antibiotic therapy. Main Outcome Measure. Prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis and gonorrhea inf ection. Results. At first test, 286 (11.5%) of 2497 girls and 143 (6.2%) of 2308 bo ys were infected with chlamydia, and 48 (2.5%) of 1883 girls and 19 (1.2%) of 1628 boys had gonorrhea. Over 90% of infections were asymptomatic. With repeated testing, chlamydia prevalence among boys dropped to half the rate of comparison schools (3.2% vs 6.4%). Among girls chlamydia prevalence decl ined only slightly (10.3% vs 11.9% in comparison schools). Conclusion. There are high rates of asymptomatic sexually transmitted disea ses (STDs) in the general urban school population. Repeated screening and t reatment are associated with declines in chlamydia prevalence among boys. E xpansion of STD screening and treatment programs to school settings is like ly to be a critical component of a national strategy to control bacterial S TDs.