(Press-News.org) Original Research
Background and Goal: Prompt treatment of chlamydia and gonorrhea following a confirmed diagnosis is essential to prevent complications and reduce transmission. Adherence to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) treatment guidelines in primary care settings remains a concern. This study aimed to quantify the overall treatment rate for chlamydia and gonorrhea and identify factors associated with treatment delays and disparities.
Study Approach: Researchers analyzed electronic health record data from the PRIME registry, which includes information from over 2,000 primary care clinicians across the United States. The study included patients diagnosed with chlamydia or gonorrhea between 2018 and 2022 and assessed whether they received appropriate antibiotic treatment within 30 days of diagnosis.
Main Results: 6,678 cases of chlamydia and 2,206 cases of gonorrhea confirmed by a positive test were identified.
75.3% of chlamydia cases and 69.6% of gonorrhea cases were treated within 30 days.
More than 80% of treated patients received antibiotics within 7 days of diagnosis.
Only 14% of chlamydia cases were treated with the recommended doxycycline and only 38.7% of gonorrhea cases were treated with the recommended ceftriaxone.
Women, young adults (ages 10-29), and suburban residents were more likely to receive treatment.
Time to treatment of chlamydia was longer for patients aged 50-59 years and for non-Hispanic Black patients.
Why It Matters: Many patients with chlamydia and gonorrhea in primary care settings do not receive the recommended treatment. This gap in care may contribute to ongoing STI transmission and adverse health outcomes, particularly among marginalized populations.
Treatment of Chlamydia and Gonorrhea in Primary Care and Its Patient-Level Variation: An American Family Cohort Study
Shiying Hao, PhD, et al
Center for Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California
PRE-EMBARGO LINK
PERMANENT LINK
An accompanying episode of the Annals of Family Medicine Podcast, featuring study authors Shiying Hao, PhD, and Neil Kamdar, MA, will be available here beginning 9am EDT March 25.
END
Many patients with chlamydia and gonorrhea are not receiving CDC-recommended treatment in primary care
Treatment of chlamydia and gonorrhea in primary care and its patient-level variation: an American family cohort study
2025-03-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
“About me” care card tool can improve care planning and cognitive health management
2025-03-24
Original Research
Background and Goal: Existing tools for cognitive impairment focus primarily on clinical diagnosis but do not support discussions that address patients’ personal fears, goals, and social needs.
Study Approach: Researchers conducted a feasibility study using a community and user-centered design approach to develop and test the “About Me” Care Card, a tool developed based on shared decision-making principles. An environmental scan identified gaps in existing cognitive care tools, and a global steering committee made up of health care professionals, patient advocacy groups, ...
Chi, Advincula named Materials Research Society Fellows
2025-03-24
Miaofang Chi and Rigoberto “Gobet” Advincula, both researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, have been elected as Class of 2025 Fellows of the Materials Research Society, or MRS. Chi also holds a joint appointment at Duke University, and Advincula is jointly appointed at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
The society, which has more than 13,000 members from 90 countries, selects Fellows for their distinguished accomplishments and outstanding contributions ...
Expectant and new fathers seek more support to improve maternal health
2025-03-24
PHILADELPHIA (March 24, 2025) – A new Penn Nursing study reveals that expectant and new fathers, particularly Black American fathers, express a significant need for more resources and support to better assist mothers during pregnancy and childbirth. The research, published in BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, highlights a gap in tailored information and resources for fathers within healthcare and social service systems.
Researchers conducted focus groups with eighty new fathers across the United States, with the majority (86%) being Black American, to understand ...
5,700-year storm archive shows rise in tropical storms and hurricanes in the Caribbean
2025-03-24
FRANKFURT. In the shallow waters of the Lighthouse Reef Atoll, located 80 kilometers off the coast of the small Central American country of Belize, the seabed suddenly drops steeply. Resembling a dark blue eye surrounded by coral reefs, the “Great Blue Hole” is a 125-meter-deep underwater cave with a diameter of 300 meters, which originated thousands of years ago from a karst cave located on a limestone island. During the last ice age, the cave’s roof collapsed. As ice sheets melted and global sea level started to rise, the cave ...
The secret behind pedestrian crossings – and why some spiral into chaos
2025-03-24
UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL MONDAY, MARCH 24, 2025 (3:00 PM U.S. Eastern time)
Pedestrian crossings generally showcase the best in pedestrian behaviour, with people naturally forming orderly lanes as they cross the road, smoothly passing those coming from the opposite direction without any bumps or scrapes. Sometimes, however, the flow gets chaotic, with individuals weaving through the crowd on their own haphazard paths to the other side.
Now, an international team of mathematicians, co-led by Professor Tim Rogers at the University of Bath in the UK and Dr Karol Bacik at MIT in ...
Organic molecules of unprecedented size discovered on Mars
2025-03-24
The longest organic molecules identified to date on Mars have recently been detected by scientists from the CNRS1, together with their colleagues from France, the United States of America, Mexico and Spain. These long carbon chains, containing up to 12 consecutive carbon atoms, could exhibit features similar to the fatty acids produced on Earth by biological activity2. The lack of geological activity and the cold, arid climate on Mars have helped preserve this invaluable organic matter in a clay-rich sample for the past 3.7 billion years. It therefore dates from the period during which life first emerged on Earth. These findings ...
Mathematicians uncover the logic behind how people walk in crowds
2025-03-24
Next time you cross a crowded plaza, crosswalk, or airport concourse, take note of the pedestrian flow. Are people walking in orderly lanes, single-file, to their respective destinations? Or is it a haphazard tangle of personal trajectories, as people dodge and weave through the crowd?
MIT instructor Karol Bacik and his colleagues studied the flow of human crowds and developed a first-of-its-kind way to predict when pedestrian paths will transition from orderly to entangled. Their findings may help inform the design of public spaces that promote safe and efficient thoroughfares.
In a paper appearing in the Proceedings of the National Academy ...
Zoom bias: The social costs of having a ‘tinny’ sound during video conferences
2025-03-24
New Haven, Conn. — Most job candidates know to dress nicely for Zoom interviews and to arrange a professional-looking background for the camera. But a new Yale study suggests they also ought to test the quality of their microphones.
A tinny voice caused by a cheap mic, researchers say, could sink their chances.
Through a series of experiments, the study demonstrates that tinny speech — a thin, metallic sound — during video conferences can have surprisingly deep social consequences, leading listeners to lower their judgments of a speaker’s intelligence, credibility, and romantic desirability. ...
Biologists discover ancient neurohormone that controls appetite
2025-03-24
A team of biologists at Queen Mary University of London has discovered that a neurohormone controlling appetite in humans has an ancient evolutionary origin, dating back over half a billion years. The findings, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, reveal that this satiety-inducing molecule, known as bombesin, is not only present in humans and other vertebrates but also in starfish and their marine relatives.
Bombesin, a small peptide, plays a key role in regulating hunger by signalling when we’ve had enough to eat. But its story doesn’t start with humans or even mammals. New research shows that ...
The right moves to reign in fibrosis
2025-03-24
By Leah Shaffer
The cells in human bodies are subject to both chemical and mechanical forces. But up until recently, scientists have not understood much about how to manipulate the mechanical side of that equation. That’s about to change.
“This is a major breakthrough in our ability to be able to control the cells that drive fibrosis,” according to Guy Genin, the Harold and Kathleen Faught Professor of Mechanical Engineering in the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, speaking of research recently published in Nature Materials.
Fibrosis is an affliction wherein ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
MBARI research and technology play integral role in new Decade of Action for Cryospheric Sciences
Protected Antarctic oceanic life threatened by ships anchoring, first underwater videos show
Pregnant and bearing the burden of measles outbreaks in Canada
Antipsychotic medications reduce vehicle crashes in drivers with schizophrenia
TikTok teen skin-care routines are harmful
Over confidence in finance bosses leads to environmental rule-breaking
From puck drop to brain pop
Urgent policy actions needed to address real AI threats, scientist reveals
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Mount Sinai experts present research at SLEEP 2025
Medigap protection and plan switching among Medicare advantage enrollees with cancer
Bubbles are key to new surface coating method for lightweight magnesium alloys
Carbon stable isotope values yield different dietary associations with added sugars in children compared to adults
Scientists discover 230 new giant viruses that shape ocean life and health
Hurricanes create powerful changes deep in the ocean, study reveals
Genetic link found between iron deficiency and Crohn’s disease
Biologists target lifecycle of deadly parasite
nTIDE June 2025 Jobs Report: Employment of people with disabilities holds steady in the face of uncertainty
Throughput computing enables astronomers to use AI to decode iconic black holes
Why some kids respond better to myopia lenses? Genes might hold the answer
Kelp forest collapse alters food web and energy dynamics in the Gulf of Maine
Improving T cell responses to vaccines
Nurses speak out: fixing care for disadvantaged patients
Fecal transplants: Promising treatment or potential health risk?
US workers’ self-reported mental health outcomes by industry and occupation
Support for care economy policies by political affiliation and caregiving responsibilities
Mailed self-collection HPV tests boost cervical cancer screening rates
AMS announces 1,000 broadcast meteorologists certified
Many Americans unaware high blood pressure usually has no noticeable symptoms
IEEE study describes polymer waveguides for reliable, high-capacity optical communication
Motor protein myosin XI is crucial for active boron uptake in plants
[Press-News.org] Many patients with chlamydia and gonorrhea are not receiving CDC-recommended treatment in primary careTreatment of chlamydia and gonorrhea in primary care and its patient-level variation: an American family cohort study