Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study

STDs are a major public health epidemic in the United States with an estimated 19 million new cases occurring annually. Associated direct medical costs are estimated at $17 billion annually (CDC, 2010). Chlamydia is the most prevalent of all STDs and is also the most reported notifiable disease in t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wilson, Elizabeth R
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/iph_theses/204
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1217&context=iph_theses
id ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-iph_theses-1217
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-iph_theses-12172013-04-23T03:21:42Z Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study Wilson, Elizabeth R STDs are a major public health epidemic in the United States with an estimated 19 million new cases occurring annually. Associated direct medical costs are estimated at $17 billion annually (CDC, 2010). Chlamydia is the most prevalent of all STDs and is also the most reported notifiable disease in the United States. While adolescents only account for an estimated 25% of the sexually active population, they account for nearly half of the 19 million cases. The higher prevalence of STDs among adolescents is most likely a reflection of multiple issues within a national socio-economic context. Additionally, the burden is even more disproportionate when examined by race. African American adolescents aged 15-19 experience the greatest burden of STDs. The purpose of this study is to examine proportions of risk behaviors reported among groups and the differences that are found. From the estimation of differences that were determined substantial, an analysis of was conducted in order to determine if adolescents in the study population exhibit clustering in regard to risk behaviors for STD acquisition and describe the where the potential clustering occurs as well as identify which factors that may serve as important indicators for STD positivity among this population. This paper examines data that was collected as part of a National Institute of Health grant-funded project entitled: “Behavioral Clustering in Adolescents with STDs”, conducted by Dr. Richard Rothenberg, Principal Investigator. This paper presents descriptive statistics for selected behavioral characteristics for four groups from the original study and each group’s contacts. The proportions for each characteristic are also analyzed for to see if behavioral clustering occurs within and between groups. The scope of this paper does not allow for the statement of conclusive results however, substantial differences did exist for variables among each sub group. Comparing data by group cluster and interview type proved to reveal the most about the study population. Negative males and their contacts may have extensive clustering as this group was only found to have substantial differences for two variables. Comparison of the positive and negative ego groups for both males and females also indicated clustering as only two (ego females) and three (ego males) variables were found to be substantially different. Proportions for variables regarding education, incarceration, sexual initiation, and number of partners were compared between several groupings of the study population. This paper recommends further analysis of the data in order to identify the patterns of assortativity which will be valuable in understanding the STD transmission dynamics among the social and sexual networks of the adolescents in the study population as well as have important implications on future research. 2011-12-15 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/iph_theses/204 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1217&context=iph_theses Public Health Theses Digital Archive @ GSU Public Health
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Public Health
spellingShingle Public Health
Wilson, Elizabeth R
Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study
description STDs are a major public health epidemic in the United States with an estimated 19 million new cases occurring annually. Associated direct medical costs are estimated at $17 billion annually (CDC, 2010). Chlamydia is the most prevalent of all STDs and is also the most reported notifiable disease in the United States. While adolescents only account for an estimated 25% of the sexually active population, they account for nearly half of the 19 million cases. The higher prevalence of STDs among adolescents is most likely a reflection of multiple issues within a national socio-economic context. Additionally, the burden is even more disproportionate when examined by race. African American adolescents aged 15-19 experience the greatest burden of STDs. The purpose of this study is to examine proportions of risk behaviors reported among groups and the differences that are found. From the estimation of differences that were determined substantial, an analysis of was conducted in order to determine if adolescents in the study population exhibit clustering in regard to risk behaviors for STD acquisition and describe the where the potential clustering occurs as well as identify which factors that may serve as important indicators for STD positivity among this population. This paper examines data that was collected as part of a National Institute of Health grant-funded project entitled: “Behavioral Clustering in Adolescents with STDs”, conducted by Dr. Richard Rothenberg, Principal Investigator. This paper presents descriptive statistics for selected behavioral characteristics for four groups from the original study and each group’s contacts. The proportions for each characteristic are also analyzed for to see if behavioral clustering occurs within and between groups. The scope of this paper does not allow for the statement of conclusive results however, substantial differences did exist for variables among each sub group. Comparing data by group cluster and interview type proved to reveal the most about the study population. Negative males and their contacts may have extensive clustering as this group was only found to have substantial differences for two variables. Comparison of the positive and negative ego groups for both males and females also indicated clustering as only two (ego females) and three (ego males) variables were found to be substantially different. Proportions for variables regarding education, incarceration, sexual initiation, and number of partners were compared between several groupings of the study population. This paper recommends further analysis of the data in order to identify the patterns of assortativity which will be valuable in understanding the STD transmission dynamics among the social and sexual networks of the adolescents in the study population as well as have important implications on future research.
author Wilson, Elizabeth R
author_facet Wilson, Elizabeth R
author_sort Wilson, Elizabeth R
title Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study
title_short Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study
title_full Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study
title_fullStr Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study
title_full_unstemmed Risk Factor Clustering Among Adolescents Infected with or At-Risk for Chlamydia: A descriptive study
title_sort risk factor clustering among adolescents infected with or at-risk for chlamydia: a descriptive study
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2011
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/iph_theses/204
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1217&context=iph_theses
work_keys_str_mv AT wilsonelizabethr riskfactorclusteringamongadolescentsinfectedwithoratriskforchlamydiaadescriptivestudy
_version_ 1716584200628338688