Authors

  1. Lee Gillespie, Gordon PhD, RN, FAEN
  2. Reed, Jennifer MD
  3. Holland, Carolyn K. MD, MEd
  4. Munafo, Jennifer Knopf MA
  5. Ekstrand, Rachael MSN, RN, CPNP
  6. Britto, Maria T. MD, MPH
  7. Huppert, Jill MD, MPH

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to describe the perceptions of pediatric emergency care providers in relation to implementing a universal sexually transmitted infection screening process for adolescent female patients in a pediatric emergency department. A descriptive qualitative design was used with a convenience sample of pediatric emergency physicians and nurses working in a large urban, pediatric teaching hospital. Participants were individually interviewed using a standard interview guide. Verbatim transcripts were analyzed using a modified constant comparative analysis method. Three overriding themes were identified that describe the perceptions of providers in relation to a universal screening process in a pediatric emergency department: Attitudes, Barriers, and Solutions. Universal sexually transmitted infection screening is one strategy that may help with early identification and treatment of adolescent female patients with undiagnosed sexually transmitted infections, and the pediatric emergency department is a potential site for such screening.