Journal article
Management of Chlamydia Cases in Australia (MoCCA): protocol for a non-randomised implementation and feasibility trial
JL Goller, J Coombe, M Temple-Smith, H Bittleston, L Sanci, R Guy, C Fairley, D Regan, N Carvalho, J Simpson, B Donovan, J Tomnay, MY Chen, C Estcourt, L Roeske, D Hawkes, M Saville, JS Hocking
BMJ Open | BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP | Published : 2022
Abstract
Introduction The sexually transmitted infection chlamydia can cause significant complications, particularly among people with female reproductive organs. Optimal management includes timely and appropriate treatment, notifying and treating sexual partners, timely retesting for reinfection and detecting complications including pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). In Australia, mainstream primary care (general practice) is where most chlamydia infections are diagnosed, making it a key setting for optimising chlamydia management. High reinfection and low retesting rates suggest partner notification and retesting are not uniformly provided. The Management of Chlamydia Cases in Australia (MoCCA) stu..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Partnership Grant (APP1150014). JSH is supported by an NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship (APP1136117), JS by an NHMRC Investigator Grant-Leadership Level (APP1196068) and BD by an NHMRC Practitioner Fellowship (APP1154828).