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1.
J Inf Sci ; 49(5): 1344-1357, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37693218

ABSTRACT

Studies of parents' online safety concerns typically centre on information privacy and on worries over unknown third parties preying on children, whereas investigations into youth perspectives on online safety have found young people to focus on threats to safety or reputation by known individuals. The case of youth who are themselves parents raises questions regarding how these differing perspectives are negotiated by individuals who are in dual roles as youth and parents. Using interview and ethnographic observation data from the longitudinal Young Parent Study in British Columbia, Canada, this analysis investigates social media and online safety practices of 113 young parents. Online safety concerns of young parents in this study focused on personal safety, their children's online privacy and image management. These concerns reflect their dual roles, integrating youth image and information management concerns with parental concerns over the safety and information privacy of their own children.

2.
Sex Transm Infect ; 95(2): 145-150, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30636705

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To describe the factors that influence gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men's (gbMSM) experiences with GetCheckedOnline.com (GCO) in British Columbia (BC), Canada. GCO clients complete an internet-based risk assessment and print a laboratory test requisition form for HIV and other STIs to take to a private laboratory for diagnostic services. METHODS: Drawing on a purposive stratified sampling framework, we conducted 37 in-depth semistructured interviews with gbMSM who had used GCO at least once between 2015 and 2017. RESULTS: Participants expressed a preference for GCO (instead of clinic-based testing) because of convenience, privacy and control over specimen collection (specifically with doing one's own throat or anal swab). Participants preferred receiving their results online via GCO compared with phone or email follow-up by clinic staff. GCO was viewed positively because it offers gbMSM living outside of urban city centres easy access to diagnostic services, including access to pooled nucleic acid amplification testing. Many participants also continued to positively view the clinic-based services available for gbMSM in their community. These services were frequently described as highly competent, tailored and comprehensive in responding to more complex needs. For example, attending a clinic was viewed as preferential to GCO in instances where there was a desire to access services addressing co-occurring health issues (eg, mental health; substance use disorders). Almost all of the participants anticipated using both GCO and clinic-based services in the future. CONCLUSIONS: gbMSM report positive experiences and perceptions of GCO; however, they do not view GCO as a panacea. The results of this study point to the need to ensure that a wide range of integrated service options (eg, online; clinic-based) are available to address the range of sexual health needs of gbMSM living in BC's diverse settings.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Services/statistics & numerical data , HIV Infections/diagnosis , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Internet , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/diagnosis , Adult , Aged , British Columbia , Delivery of Health Care , Diagnostic Tests, Routine/statistics & numerical data , HIV/genetics , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Preference , Qualitative Research , Risk Assessment , Sexual Behavior , Sexual Partners , Young Adult
3.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 18(1): 57, 2018 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29378574

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Online health services are a rapidly growing aspect of public health provision, including testing for sexually transmitted and other blood-borne infections (STBBI). Generally, healthcare providers, policymakers, and clients imbue online approaches with great positive potential (e.g., encouraging clients' agency; providing cost-effective services to more clients). However, the promise of online health services may vary across contexts and be perceived in negative or ambiguous ways (e.g., risks to 'gold standard' care provision; loss of provider control over an intervention; uncertainty related to budget implications). This study examines attitudes and perceptions regarding the development of a novel online STBBI testing service in Vancouver, Canada. We examine the perceptions about the intervention's potential by interviewing practitioners and planners who were engaged in the development and initial implementation of this testing service. METHODS: We conducted in-depth interviews with 37 healthcare providers, administrators, policymakers, and community-based service providers engaged in the design and launch of the new online STBBI testing service. We also conducted observations during planning and implementation meetings for the new service. Thematic analysis techniques were employed to identify codes and broader discursive themes across the interview transcripts and observation notes. RESULTS: Some study participants expressed concern that the potential popularity of the new testing service might increase demand on existing sexual health services or become fiscally unsustainable. However, most participants regarded the new service as having the potential to improve STBBI testing in several ways, including reducing waiting times, enhancing privacy and confidentiality, appealing to more tech-savvy sub-populations, optimizing the redistribution of demands on face-to-face service provision, and providing patient-centred technology to empower clients to seek testing. CONCLUSIONS: Participants perceived this online STBBI testing service to have the potential to improve sexual health care provision. But, they also anticipated actions-and-reactions, revealing a need to monitor ongoing implementation dynamics. They also identified the larger, potentially system-transforming dimension of the new technology, which enables new system drivers (consumers) and reduces the amount of control health care providers have over online STBBI testing compared to conventional in-person testing.


Subject(s)
Internet , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Public Health , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/diagnosis , Telemedicine , Adolescent , Adult , Canada/epidemiology , Confidentiality , Female , Humans , Internet/economics , Male , Population Surveillance , Public Health/economics , Qualitative Research , Reproductive Health , Sexual Behavior , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/epidemiology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/prevention & control , Telemedicine/economics , Telemedicine/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
4.
JMIR Public Health Surveill ; 3(4): e75, 2017 Nov 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29097352

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Web-based sexual health resources are typically evaluated in terms of their efficacy. Information is lacking about how sexual health promotion websites are perceived and used. It is essential to understand website use to address challenges with adherence and attrition to Web-based health interventions. An existing theoretical framework for examining loyalty to electronic health (eHealth) interventions has been not yet been applied in the context of sexual health promotion nor has the association between e-loyalty and intended intervention efficacy outcomes been investigated. OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this study were to investigate users' loyalty toward a sexual health website (ie, e-loyalty), measure user perceptions of the website, and measure the association between e-loyalty and perceived knowledge increase and intent to change behavior. METHODS: Over 4 months, website users (clients and health care providers) participated in an open, online, cross-sectional survey about their user experiences that measured e-loyalty, user perceptions, and intended website efficacy outcomes. Relationships between user perceptions and e-loyalty were investigated using structural equation modeling (SEM). Associations between e-loyalty and website efficacy outcomes were tested using Spearman rank correlation. RESULTS: A total of 173 participants completed user perception questions and were included in the analysis. E-loyalty was high for both clients and providers and was significantly correlated with clients' perceived knowledge increase (ρ(171)=.30, P<.001), their intent to have safer sex (ρ(171)=.24, P=.01), and their intent to get tested for sexually transmitted infections (ρ(171)=.37, P<.001). The SEM showed that trustworthiness, overall experience, active trust, and effectiveness were directly related to e-loyalty. Finding the website "easy to understand" was significantly related to active trust (ie, participants' willingness to act upon information presented on the website). CONCLUSIONS: E-loyalty may be related to the efficacy of the selected website in improving one's sexual health and was significantly associated with all three intended knowledge and behavioral outcomes. To increase e-loyalty, trustworthiness and active trust are important user perceptions to deliberately engender. Our findings indicate that understanding a website contributes to active trust, thereby highlighting the importance of considering eHealth literacy in designing health promotion websites. Our study confirms the relevance of e-loyalty as an outcome for evaluating the antecedents of the use and efficacy of online public health interventions across disciplines by adapting and validating an existing e-loyalty framework to the field of sexual health promotion. Our findings suggest that e-loyalty is positively associated with measures of website efficacy, including increased knowledge and intent to change behavior. Longitudinal research with larger samples could further investigate the relationships between e-loyalty, website understandability, and outcomes of online health interventions to determine how the manipulation of website characteristics may impact user perceptions and e-loyalty.

5.
Sociol Health Illn ; 39(6): 816-831, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27791267

ABSTRACT

The telling of birth stories (i.e. stories that describe women's experiences of giving birth) is a common and important social practice. Whereas most research on birth narratives reflects the stories of middle-class, 'adult' women, we examine how the birth stories told by early-age mothers interconnect with broader narratives regarding social stigma and childbearing at 'too early' an age. Drawing on narrative theory, we analyse in-depth interviews with 81 mothers (ages 15-24 years) conducted in Greater Vancouver and Prince George, Canada, in 2014-15. Their accounts of giving birth reveal the central importance of birth narratives in their identity formation as young mothers. Participants' narratives illuminated the complex interactions among identity formation, social expectations, and negotiations of social and physical spaces as they narrated their experiences of labour and birth. Through the use of narrative inquiry, we examine the ways in which re-telling the experience of giving birth serves to situate young mothers in relation to their past and future selves. These personal stories are also told in relation to a meta-narrative regarding social stigma faced by 'teenage' mothers, as well as the public's 'gaze' on motherhood in general - even within the labour and delivery room.


Subject(s)
Mothers/psychology , Narration , Parturition/psychology , Pregnancy in Adolescence , Adolescent , Canada , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Pregnancy , Social Stigma , Young Adult
6.
JMIR Res Protoc ; 5(3): e186, 2016 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27649716

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Testing for sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections (STBBI) is an effective public health strategy that can promote personal control of one's health and prevent the spread of these infections. Multiple barriers deter access to testing including fear of stigmatization, inaccurate health care provider perceptions of risk, and reduced availability of clinic services and infrastructure. Concurrent increases in sexually transmitted infection (STI) rates and demands on existing clinical services make this an even more pressing concern. Web-based testing offers several advantages that may alleviate existing clinical pressures and facilitate appropriate testing access. OBJECTIVE: This paper describes the planning, development, and usability testing of a novel Web-based testing service, GetCheckedOnline (GCO), as a complementary testing option integrated within existing sexual health services within British Columbia (BC). METHODS: From 2009 to 2014, we engaged a multidisciplinary team in the design and development of GCO. We conducted 3 initial research studies to ascertain the opinions of youth, men who have sex with men (MSM), and STI clinic clients regarding Web-based testing and elicited perspectives of sexual health care providers through focus groups. We developed an informed consent process, risk assessment questions, and test recommendations based on provincial and national guidelines and evaluated these through consultations with clinical and community stakeholders. We also conducted a preliminary health equity impact assessment whose findings also informed the GCO program mode. Finally, from April 2011 to December 2012 we gathered qualitative data from 25 participants on the functionality and usability of a GCO prototype and incorporated their recommendations into a final model. RESULTS: GCO launched in the fall of 2014 across 6 pilot sites in Vancouver, BC. The service involves 3 main steps: (1) create an account, complete an assessment, and print a laboratory requisition, (2) provide blood and urine specimens at participating laboratory locations, and (3) receive test results on the Internet or by phone. During this pilot phase, we promoted GCO to existing STI clinic clients and MSM in the Greater Vancouver region. A rigorous mixed-method evaluation of GCO's uptake, acceptability, and health system impacts is currently underway. CONCLUSIONS: GCO is the first comprehensive Web-based STBBI testing program in Canada that is integrated with existing sexual health services, with the potential to reduce pressures on existing clinical services and reach populations facing the greatest barriers to testing. Our experience highlights the facilitators and challenges of developing and implementing novel complex eHealth interventions within the health care system, and underscores the importance of considering broader implementation contexts.

7.
Sociol Health Illn ; 35(1): 1-16, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22497206

ABSTRACT

Sexual health and sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing is typically portrayed as a women's issue amid men's estrangement from healthcare services. While the underreporting of men's STIs has been linked to masculinities, little is known about how women interpret and respond to heterosexual men's sexual health practices. The findings drawn from this qualitative study of 34 young women reveal how femininities can be complicit in sustaining, as well as being critical of and disrupting masculine discourses that affirm sexual pleasure and resistance to health help-seeking as men's patriarchal privileges. Our analysis revealed three patterns: looking after the man's libido refers to women's emphasised femininity whereby the man's preference for unprotected sex and reticence to be tested for STIs was accommodated. Negotiating the stronger sex refers to ambivalent femininities, in which participants strategically resist, cooperate and comply with men's sexual health practices. Rejecting the patriarchal double standard that celebrates men as 'studs' and subordinates women as 'sluts' for embodying similar sexual practices reflects protest femininities. Overall, the findings reveal that conventional heterosexual gender relations, in which hegemonic masculinity is accommodated by women who align to emphasised femininity, continues to direct many participants' expectations around men's sexual health and STI testing.


Subject(s)
Interpersonal Relations , Men's Health , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/psychology , Women/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Femininity , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Masculinity , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Sex Factors , Sexual Partners/psychology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/diagnosis , Social Dominance , Young Adult
8.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 12: 240, 2012 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22863400

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Little is known about service providers' knowledge, attitudes, and experiences in relation to the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of individuals seeking care for sexually transmitted infections (STIs), and how they influence the delivery of services. The purpose of this study was to explore the perceptions of STI care providers and the ways they approached their practice. METHODS: We used a qualitative approach drawing on methods used in thematic analysis. Individual semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with 21 service providers delivering STI services in youth clinics, STI clinics, reproductive health clinics, and community public health units in British Columbia (BC), Canada. RESULTS: Service providers' descriptions of their activities and roles were shaped by a number of themes including specialization, scarcity, and maintaining the status quo. The analysis suggests that service providers perceive, at times, the delivery of STI care to be inefficient and inadequate. CONCLUSION: Findings from this study identify deficits in the delivery of STI services in BC. To understand these deficits, more research is needed to examine the larger health care structure within which service providers work, and how this structure not only informs and influences the delivery of services, but also how particular structural barriers impinge on and/or restrict practice.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Health Services/supply & distribution , Attitude of Health Personnel , Community Health Workers/psychology , Delivery of Health Care/methods , Health Personnel/psychology , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/prevention & control , Adolescent , Adolescent Health Services/standards , Adult , Aged , British Columbia , Clinical Competence/standards , Community Health Workers/education , Confidentiality , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Personnel/education , Healthcare Disparities/ethnology , Healthcare Disparities/standards , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Qualitative Research , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/therapy , Social Stigma , Specialization/standards
9.
J Empir Res Hum Res Ethics ; 7(2): 20-33, 2012 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22565580

ABSTRACT

Debates over how to determine age of consent for youth to participate in research feature prominently in the practice of researchers, research ethics boards (REBs), and community decision makers working with youth. In particular, tensions can arise over how the ethical principles of beneficence, autonomy, and justice are interpreted and applied in research involving young people. We discuss our experiences obtaining ethical approval to conduct a participatory action research project involving youth and the differences of opinion we encountered regarding underage youth's capability to make informed consent. We suggest that researchers, REBs, and community decision makers all share a responsibility to conduct proactive outreach to youth participants, so that they are adequately informed of their rights related to research.


Subject(s)
Community Participation , Health Services Research/ethics , Informed Consent/ethics , Patient Selection/ethics , Research Design , Research Subjects , Residence Characteristics , Adolescent , Decision Making , Ethics Committees, Research , Health Services Research/methods , Humans , Personal Autonomy , Social Justice
10.
Subst Use Misuse ; 43(8-9): 1129-50, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18649235

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the connections between stressors, substance use, and experience of violence among women (N = 125) who accessed help from domestic violence shelters in British Columbia, Canada between October 2001 and June 2003. Changes in substance use and stressors following a shelter stay were explored, using both qualitative and quantitative methods. Women generally decreased their use of alcohol and stimulants, and this change was found to be integrally connected to social and structural supports made available to them. Future research that augments current stress models of addiction by considering social and structural factors that come into play in women's substance use and domestic violence is suggested. The study's limitations are noted.


Subject(s)
Battered Women/statistics & numerical data , Domestic Violence/statistics & numerical data , Public Housing/statistics & numerical data , Spouse Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Women's Health , Adult , Alcohol Drinking/epidemiology , Alcohol Drinking/psychology , Alcoholism/diagnosis , Alcoholism/epidemiology , Alcoholism/psychology , Battered Women/psychology , Crime Victims/psychology , Crime Victims/statistics & numerical data , Domestic Violence/psychology , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Risk Factors , Spouse Abuse/psychology , Stereotyping , Stress, Psychological/diagnosis , Substance Abuse Treatment Centers/statistics & numerical data , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires
11.
Perspect Sex Reprod Health ; 39(1): 13-20, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17355377

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Despite advances related to the provision of emergency contraception in Canada, particularly the granting of independent prescriptive authority to pharmacists in 2000, little is known about the ways in which women perceive potential barriers to using it. METHODS: In 2004, an ethnically diverse sample of 52 women living in Greater Vancouver participated in interviews that were analyzed for an assessment of women's knowledge, attitudes and experiences related to emergency contraception, with particular attention to the ways in which ethnicity affected their stories. RESULTS: Participants generally misperceived emergency contraception as an abortifacient, and often mistakenly thought that it has long-term effects on health and fertility. Knowledge gaps regarding reproductive physiology impeded clear understanding of when it is most effective. Participants also reported receiving subtle and sometimes overtly stigmatizing messages from providers when they sought emergency contraception. Asian and South Asian women were particularly concerned about negative interactions with providers; for example, they feared that female providers from their sociocultural community might recognize, chastise or gossip about them. Institutional policies (e.g., a Catholic hospital's refusal to provide the method), coupled with low awareness of pharmacists' prescriptive authority, also created barriers to use. CONCLUSIONS: Women's ability to benefit from emergency contraception is hampered by lack of knowledge and conservative cultural or social mores. Serious contextual and structural shifts are required before woman-centered approaches to provision of the method become the norm.


Subject(s)
Contraception Behavior/psychology , Contraceptives, Postcoital/therapeutic use , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , British Columbia , Contraception Behavior/ethnology , Female , Health Services Needs and Demand/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Nursing Methodology Research , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/ethnology , Qualitative Research , Research Design/standards , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires
12.
Can J Public Health ; 97(5): 388-92, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17120878

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study explores changes in the use of alcohol and other substances by women in British Columbia as they moved into shelters for abused women and again three months later. We see this time as a key life transition, and potentially a rich opportunity for influencing women's substance use behaviour. The purpose of this study was to document changes in the level of use of alcohol and other substances and the levels of stress among women as they moved through shelters for abused women. METHODS: Standardized questionnaires augmented by qualitative interviews were employed to measure alcohol and substance use, experiences of abuse, and levels and types of stressors facing women in this situation. FINDINGS: Significant reductions in women's use of alcohol and stimulants were observed from Interview I to Interview II, but there was no significant reduction in use of other depressants or tobacco use. Levels of stress decreased and sources of stress changed for the women after the shelter experience. Stress connected to relationship with partners had the most significant decrease, followed by mental health, housing, and legal issues. Women reported barriers to accessing financial aid and services for substance use outside of the shelter. CONCLUSIONS: Women's experiences of violence and substance use were found to be interconnected in complex ways and changes in substance use were affected by a range of influences, such as financial concerns, mothering, relationships, levels of social support, and physical and mental health issues. Substance-using women who have experienced violence are an underserved population and a multi-sectoral response designed to address psychosocial, relational, and structural issues could better help them improve their overall health.


Subject(s)
Alcoholism/epidemiology , Battered Women/statistics & numerical data , Housing , Stress, Psychological/etiology , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Adult , Battered Women/psychology , British Columbia/epidemiology , Child , Female , Humans , Psychosocial Deprivation , Surveys and Questionnaires
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