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Internet-Based Free Chlamydia Tests Net High Rate of Positive Results


 

LOS ANGELES — Free home swab test kits requested via the Internet have detected hundreds of cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and Trichomonas using a simple online recruitment strategy that was so effective that it is now being extended to several states.

The novel “I Want the Kit” program was devised by Johns Hopkins University researchers in 2004, alerting young women to facts about chlamydia and other sexually transmitted diseases, and offering kits with prepaid postage to allow for confidential testing.

Word went out via radio, magazine, and newspaper advertisements in Baltimore initially, but soon Internet traffic began to dominate responses.

“Our original objective was to reach out to teens who might have issues with fear and privacy going to a clinic,” Dr. Charlotte A. Gaydos said at the annual meeting of the Society for Adolescent Medicine, where she presented interim study results.

Nearly 5,000 kits have been requested to date, 97% through the study's site, www.iwantthekit.org

About one-third of the kits were returned with vaginal swab samples collected at home, with positive chlamydia results in 10% and positive gonorrhea tests in 1%, said Dr. Gaydos, of the university.

Trichomonas testing was added in 2006 and has resulted in a detection rate of 12% in 1,032 returned samples.

Dr. Gaydos reported that more than 98% of women said the instructions for collection were easy, 97% said the collection itself was easy, and 92% said they would use an Internet-based program again for STD testing.

After someone requests a kit, it arrives at her home in a plain envelope, listing as the return address only the street address of the project in Baltimore. The packet contains detailed instructions, the test swab, and return packaging—including postage.

“I'm reaching out to the 14-year-old who has no money for postage and is not going to tell her mother she's sexually active,” said Dr. Gaydos.

Completed samples can be dropped off in any mailbox and are tested by nucleic acid amplification tests for all three STDs. The test method has been found in previous research to be highly accurate—and even more so with self-collected vaginal swabs than with urine specimens.

Positive test results are followed up by referrals to free treatment clinics close to the adolescents' or women's homes.

Beyond identifying cases of sexually transmitted infections that might not otherwise have been detected, the researchers were able to obtain demographic and sexual information from women who responded.

A few 14-year-olds participated but none were positive for chlamydia. However, more than one-quarter of all respondents were aged 15-19 years, and they had the highest prevalence for chlamydia of any age group, at 15%.

About one-third of the respondents were aged 20-24 years. In this group, the prevalence rate was 11%. Somewhat surprising to researchers was the high rate of participation among women 25-29 years (18% of respondents, with a prevalence rate of 7%) and those over 30 years (22% of the respondents, with a prevalence rate of 1%).

The researchers found a high rate of sexual risk among women participating in the study, with 55% reporting a history of an STD, 59% reporting more than one sex partner in the previous 90 days, 39% reporting a new partner in the previous 90 days, more than half reporting drinking before sex, 31% reporting anal sex, and 23% reporting a history of forced sex.

Every state receives Centers for Disease Control and Prevention funding for free STD testing through the CDC Infertility Prevention Program, she said.

Dr. Gaydos disclosed that Gen-Probe, Inc. of San Diego provided free diagnostic kits for the study.

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