PLoS Medicine (Jun 2008)

Effect of a brief video intervention on incident infection among patients attending sexually transmitted disease clinics.

  • Lee Warner,
  • Jeffrey D Klausner,
  • Cornelis A Rietmeijer,
  • C Kevin Malotte,
  • Lydia O'Donnell,
  • Andrew D Margolis,
  • Gregory L Greenwood,
  • Doug Richardson,
  • Shelley Vrungos,
  • Carl R O'Donnell,
  • Craig B Borkowf,
  • Safe in the City Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050135
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 6
p. e135

Abstract

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Sexually transmitted disease (STD) prevention remains a public health priority. Simple, practical interventions to reduce STD incidence that can be easily and inexpensively administered in high-volume clinical settings are needed. We evaluated whether a brief video, which contained STD prevention messages targeted to all patients in the waiting room, reduced acquisition of new infections after that clinic visit.In a controlled trial among patients attending three publicly funded STD clinics (one in each of three US cities) from December 2003 to August 2005, all patients (n = 38,635) were systematically assigned to either a theory-based 23-min video depicting couples overcoming barriers to safer sexual behaviors, or the standard waiting room environment. Condition assignment alternated every 4 wk and was determined by which condition (intervention or control) was in place in the clinic waiting room during the patient's first visit within the study period. An intent-to-treat analysis was used to compare STD incidence between intervention and control patients. The primary endpoint was time to diagnosis of incident laboratory-confirmed infections (gonorrhea, chlamydia, trichomoniasis, syphilis, and HIV), as identified through review of medical records and county STD surveillance registries. During 14.8 mo (average) of follow-up, 2,042 patients (5.3%) were diagnosed with incident STD (4.9%, intervention condition; 5.7%, control condition). In survival analysis, patients assigned to the intervention condition had significantly fewer STDs compared with the control condition (hazard ratio [HR], 0.91; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.84 to 0.99).Showing a brief video in STD clinic waiting rooms reduced new infections nearly 10% overall in three clinics. This simple, low-intensity intervention may be appropriate for adoption by clinics that serve similar patient populations.http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov (#NCT00137670).