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Comparison of Opt-In Versus Opt-Out Testing for Sexually Transmitted Infections Among Inmates in a County Jail
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Comparison of Opt-In Versus Opt-Out Testing for Sexually Transmitted Infections Among Inmates in a County Jail

Raees A. Shaikh, Kari A. Simonsen, Anne O'Keefe, Mary Earley, Mark Foxall, K. M. Islam, Austin Person, Cole Boyle, Uriel Sandkovsky and Ruth Margalit
Journal of correctional health care, Vol.21(4), pp.408-416
10/01/2015
PMID: 26285597

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Public, Environmental & Occupational Health Science & Technology
A majority of jails in the United States rely on an opt-in (voluntary) rather than opt-out (universal) approach to testing for sexually transmitted infections (STIs). This study compares an opt-out approach at intake to opt-in testing during incarceration and estimates the prevalence of common STIs among jail inmates. Data derive from a universal intake pilot testing program (n = 298) and an established, student-led voluntary testing program (n = 1,963), respectively. The adjusted prevalence as well as the odds of testing positive for chlamydia were significantly higher in the opt-out program (p = .025 and .008, respectively) than the opt-in program but not for gonorrhea (p = .402 and .300, respectively). These results demonstrate the potential public health benefit of implementation of universal STI testing of jail inmates.

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