Improving Access to Syphilis Screening Among Unhoused People in Yolo County, USA

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/ijms.2024.2553

Keywords:

syphilis, Homeless Persons, Homelessness, Vulnerability of homeless patients, Incentive-based strategy, Congenital, Syphilis Screening, Unhoused Populations, Public Health Intervention, Congenital Syphilis, Incentive Programs, Street Medicine, Quality Improvement, Screening Uptake, Health Disparities, Preventive Healthcare

Abstract

Background: This study aimed to increase syphilis screening rates amongst unhoused residents of Yolo County, California, through the implementation of plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles. Yolo County has a strategic goal to eliminate congenital syphilis cases. Homelessness is a known risk factor for syphilis. 

Methods: The primary researcher was embedded in a street medicine team. Using quality improvement tools like stakeholder interviews, workflow diagrams, and best practices from literature, we outlined the team's workflow for syphilis screening and developed ideas to improve uptake and expand capacity. The most effective cycle implemented gift card incentives for syphilis screening. During the patient intake we offered the option to receive a syphilis test, informing the patient of the gift card incentive. 

Results: Prior to gift card incentives, the team screened 1.6 patients on average per clinic for a total of 30 patients screened in April to June of 2022. After the gift card incentive was implemented, the team screened 3.0 patients on average per clinic, screening a total of 223 patients from July 2022 to May 2023. The intervention produced an 87.5% increase in screening rates (P=0.0094). The data showed a significant increase in syphilis testing upon implementing the gift card incentive program.

Conclusion: These findings contribute to evidence supporting the use of patient incentives for public health prevention measures. This model could be applied to other populations to increase health screening participation. More research is needed on the effect of gift card incentives on confirmatory testing and treatment rates for syphilis.

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References

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The graph titled "Average Participants Tested per Clinic Day by Month" shows the number of participants tested for syphilis each clinic day, month by month, between April 2022 and May 2023. The black vertical line marks the introduction of a gift card incentive in July 2022. Before the incentive, the average number of participants tested per day was lower, around 1-2, but after the incentive, the numbers increased significantly, peaking at 4 participants per day in several months. This demonstrates the impact of incentives on improving testing rates​.

Published

2024-09-30

How to Cite

Kupa, J., Bruguera, R., Agnoli, N., Agnoli, A., Melgoza, L., Portnoy, A., & Portnoy, P. S. (2024). Improving Access to Syphilis Screening Among Unhoused People in Yolo County, USA. International Journal of Medical Students, 12(3), 274–277. https://doi.org/10.5195/ijms.2024.2553