Adolescent Chlamydia Screening in Pediatric Primary Care: A Quality Improvement Project

  • Leigh Foppert
  • , Wendy Bowles
  • , Haley Belardo
  • , Rosie Zeno
  • , Stephanie Hosley
  • , Sarah Wood

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Aim: To increase Chlamydia trachomatis screening in adolescents 15–19 years of age from 7.8% to 15% following a 6-week implementation of universal chlamydia screening at three paediatric primary care (PPC) sites. Methods: Pre-implementation (1 January 2022–19 October 2022) and post-implementation (20 October 2022–1 June 2023) screening rates were tracked through run charts and compared via Chi-square testing. Universal opt-out chlamydia screening with universal urine collection for 15- to 19-year-old was implemented at well visits, along with patient and staff education, and sexually transmitted infection treatment protocols. Results: Chlamydia trachomatis screening increased from 7.8% to 34.1% with implementation of universal opt-out chlamydia screening. Proportions of patients screened increased significantly among White individuals, males and privately insured individuals. Conclusions: A universal C. trachomatis screening project can be feasibly implemented in pediatric primary care and successfully increase adolescent chlamydia screening rates. Implications for the Profession: Implementing a universal opt-out C. trachomatis screening project is feasible in PPC and can help achieve the public health goal of chlamydia identification and treatment. Impact: These findings will be impactful for both paediatric primary care and adolescent patients. The universal, opt-out C. trachomatis screening approach facilitated screening increases, improved equity in screening and led to increased case detection and treatment which has vast significance for those patients. Reporting Method: This manuscript is submitted using the SQUIRE 2.0 guidelines for quality improvement reporting. Patient Contribution: Patient contribution included de-identified data collection of chlamydia screening rates of eligible adolescents 15–19 years old who attended routine well visits at the three PPC locations. The data were reviewed on a dashboard, then stratified by race, ethnicity, payor and sex assigned at birth.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8028-8035
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Advanced Nursing
Volume81
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • adolescent
  • chlamydia
  • primary health care
  • quality improvement
  • sexually transmitted diseases

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