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Journal Article

Citation

John SA, Walsh JL, Cho YI, Weinhardt LS. Arch. Sex. Behav. 2018; 47(2): 481-492.

Affiliation

Joseph J. Zilber School of Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s10508-017-1051-0

PMID

29090392

Abstract

Patient-delivered partner therapy (PDPT) is the practice of providing patients diagnosed with a bacterial sexually transmitted infection (STI) medication to give directly to their partner for treatment without requiring the partner to participate in diagnostic testing and counseling. Despite a growing body of evidence in support of PDPT, literature is limited to date on the influence of perceived risk of intimate partner violence (IPV) on PDPT use. We analyzed mixed-method data from 196 quantitative surveys (61% male, M age = 31.2, 92% Black or African-American) and 25 qualitative interviews to better understand the barriers and facilitators associated with PDPT delivery for patients attending a Midwestern, publicly funded STI clinic in the U.S. Nearly a third of surveyed patients (29; 34% of women, 26% of men) expressed worry about IPV when delivering PDPT. Patients had concerns about infidelity worry, embarrassment, and anxiety (referred to as IWEA hereafter) associated with partner notification and PDPT delivery. We found IWEA was highly correlated with IPV concerns in a fully adjusted logistic regression model. Women had 2.43 (95% CI = 1.09-5.42) times greater odds of worrying about IPV than men; other significant factors associated with IPV worry included higher condom use, no prior STI diagnosis, and being uninsured (as compared to having Medicare/Medicaid insurance). Encouraging communication between healthcare providers and their patients about the potential for IPV could facilitate patient triaging that results in the consideration of alternative partner referral mechanisms for patients or partners at risk of harm and better outcomes for patients and their partners.


Language: en

Keywords

Expedited partner therapy; Intimate partner violence; Partner notification; Patient-delivered partner therapy; Sexually transmitted infections

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