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Journal Article

Citation

Hammarström S, Lindroth M, Nilsen P, Nolskog P, Bernhardsson S. Sex Reprod. Healthc. 2021; 29: e100643.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.srhc.2021.100643

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Young people are disproportionally burdened by sexual ill health. The SEXual health Identification Tool (SEXIT) was developed for use at youth clinics, to facilitate identification of visitors exposed to or at risk of sexual ill health. The aim of this study was to explore experiences of using SEXIT among youth clinic staff who participated in a pilot implementation, with a focus on usefulness, implementation determinants, and feasibility of implementing SEXIT at Swedish youth clinics.

METHODS: Four focus group discussions were conducted with youth clinic staff from three clinics. The clinics had used SEXIT systematically in consultations with all visitors for one month. Data were analysed using qualitative analysis designed for focus groups.

RESULTS: Most participants experienced that the SEXIT routines were well functioning and that using SEXIT gave a comprehensive picture of the visitor and resulted in more concrete answers, which facilitated the risk assessment. The medical staff experienced that they identified more youth at risk with SEXIT, while the psychosocial staff were less convinced. Existing challenges related to the routines at the clinics and heavy workload during drop-in hours.

CONCLUSIONS: Staff experience SEXIT as useful for identifying young people exposed to or at risk of sexual ill health. Systematic use ensures consistency and quality in assessing the visitors, which may facilitate implementation. The use of SEXIT is challenged by heavy workload, conflicting routines, and the experience that some visitors identified through SEXIT decline further care. Implementation of SEXIT in Swedish youth clinics is considered feasible.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescent; Risk assessment; Sexual violence; Qualitative research; Implementation science; Sexually transmitted infections

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