Evaluating the Impact of the COVID-19–Related Public Health Restrictions on Access to Digital Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infection Testing in British Columbia, Canada: An Interrupted Time Series Analysis

Author:

Iyamu Ihoghosa,Pedersen Heather1,Ablona Aidan1,Chang Hsiu-Ju1,Worthington Catherine2,Grace Daniel3,Grennan Troy,Wong Jason1,Salmon Amy,Koehoorn Mieke,Gilbert Mark

Affiliation:

1. BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC), Vancouver

2. School of Public Health and Social Policy, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia

3. Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Ontario

Abstract

Background Evidence of long-term impacts of COVID-19–related public health restrictions on digital sexually transmitted and blood-borne infection (STBBI) testing utilization is limited. We assessed these impacts on GetCheckedOnline (a digital testing resource for STBBIs) relative to all STBBI tests in British Columbia (BC). Methods Interrupted time series analyses were conducted using GetCheckedOnline program data comparing monthly test episodes (STBBI tests per requisition) among BC residents, stratified by BC region, and testers' sociodemographic and sexual risk profiles, for the prepandemic (March 2018–February 2020) and pandemic periods (March 2020–October 2021). Trends in GetCheckedOnline testing per 100 STBBI tests in BC regions with GetCheckedOnline were analyzed. Each outcome was modeled using segmented generalized least squared regression. Results Overall, 17,215 and 22,646 test episodes were conducted in the prepandemic and pandemic periods. Monthly GetCheckedOnline test episodes reduced immediately after restrictions. By October 2021 (end of the pandemic period), monthly GetCheckedOnline testing increased by 21.24 test episodes per million BC residents (95% confidence interval, −11.88 to 54.84), and GetCheckedOnline tests per 100 tests in corresponding BC regions increased by 1.10 (95% confidence interval, 0.02 to 2.17) above baseline trends. After initial increases among users at higher STBBI risk (symptomatic testers/testers reporting sexual contacts with STBBIs), testing decreased below baseline trends later in the pandemic, whereas monthly GetCheckedOnline testing increased among people 40 years or older, men who have sex with men, racialized minorities, and first-time testers via GetCheckedOnline. Conclusions Sustained increases in utilization of digital STBBI testing during the pandemic suggest fundamental changes in STBBI testing in BC, highlighting the need for accessible and appropriate digital testing, especially for those most affected by STBBIs.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Dermatology

Reference26 articles.

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