Journal article
Young pregnant women's views on the acceptability of screening for chlamydia as part of routine antenatal care
JE Bilardi, DL De Guingand, MJ Temple-Smith, S Garland, CK Fairley, S Grover, E Wallace, JS Hocking, S Tabrizi, M Pirotta, MY Chen
BMC Public Health | BMC | Published : 2010
Abstract
Background. In pregnancy, untreated chlamydia infection has been associated with adverse outcomes for both mother and infant. Like most women, pregnant women infected with chlamydia do not report genital symptoms, and are therefore unlikely to be aware of their infection. The aim of this study was to determine the acceptability of screening pregnant women aged 16-25 years for chlamydia as part of routine antenatal care. Methods. As part of a larger prospective, cross-sectional study of pregnant women aged 16-25 years attending antenatal services across Melbourne, Australia, 100 women were invited to participate in a face-to-face, semi structured interview on the acceptability of screening fo..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was funded by the Australian Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing through a Chlamydia Pilot Program Targeted Grant. MC and JH were supported by NHMRC fellowships 400399 and 359276, respectively.