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Understanding Sexual Healthcare Seeking Behaviour: Why a Broader Research Perspective is Needed

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Health Services
Date 2017 Jul 8
PMID 28683744
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: Despite effective and accessible treatments, many sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in high-income countries go untreated, causing poor sexual health for individuals and their partners. Research into STI care has tended to focus on biomedical aspects of infections using patient samples and prioritised attendance at healthcare services. This approach overlooks the broader social context of STIs and healthcare-seeking behaviours, which are important to better understand the issue of untreated infections.

Main Body: This paper is structured around three main arguments to improve understanding of help-seeking behaviour for STIs in order to help reduce the burden of untreated STIs for both individuals and public health. Firstly, biomedical perspectives must be combined with sociological approaches to align individual priorities with clinical insights. More research attention on understanding the subjective experiences of STI symptoms and links to healthcare-seeking behaviour is also needed. Secondly, a focus on non-attendance at healthcare services is required to address the patient-centric focus of STI research and to understand the reasons why individuals do not seek care. Finally, research using non-patient samples recruited from outside medical contexts is vital to accurately reflect the range of behaviours, beliefs and health issues within the population to ensure appropriate and effective service provision. We suggest piggy-backing other research on to existing studies as an effective way to recruit participants not defined by their patient status, and use a study recruiting a purposive non-patient sample from an existing dataset - Britain's third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3) as an illustrative example.

Conclusion: STIs are common but treatable, however a range of social and cultural factors prevent access to healthcare services and contribute to the burden of untreated infection. Different conceptual and empirical approaches are needed to better understand care-seeking behaviour and reduce the gap between social and biomedical advancements in managing untreated infection.

Citing Articles

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Effect of women empowerment on treatment seeking practice for sexually transmitted infections among women in Ethiopia.

Abeje G, Zelalem M, Bogale F, Worku N BMC Infect Dis. 2024; 24(1):623.

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Nearly half of adults with symptoms of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) did not seek clinical care: A population-based study of treatment-seeking behavior among adults in Rakai, Uganda.

Ogale Y, Kennedy C, Nalugoda F, Mpagazi J, Jackson J, Galiwango R PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023; 3(5):e0001626.

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Mwamba B, Mayers P, Shea J Reprod Health. 2022; 19(1):225.

PMID: 36522681 PMC: 9756593. DOI: 10.1186/s12978-022-01507-6.


Towards the prevention of sexually transmitted infections (STIs): Healthcare-seeking behaviour of women with STIs or STI symptoms in sub-Saharan Africa.

Seidu A, Aboagye R, Okyere J, Adu C, Aboagye-Mensah R, Ahinkorah B Sex Transm Infect. 2022; 99(5):296-302.

PMID: 36202610 PMC: 10359580. DOI: 10.1136/sextrans-2022-055424.


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