Background
Young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (‘Aboriginal’ from here on) people resident in regional and remote centres in Australia are more likely than their non-Aboriginal age counterparts to acquire sexually transmissible infections (STIs) [
1]. In 2017, surveillance data indicates higher notification rates for Aboriginal populations than non-Indigenous populations for Chlamydia (1194 vs. 427 per 100,000 people), gonorrhoea (627 vs. 96 per 100,000 people) and infectious syphilis (102.5 vs 15.5 per 100,000 people). STI notification rates are up to 5, 30 and 50 times higher respectively for Chlamydia, gonorrhoea and infectious syphilis respectively in remote and very remote areas, and were higher among Indigenous young people aged 15–29 years compared to older Indigenous people and non-Indigenous age peers [
1]. In hyperendemic areas such as the Northern Territory, Australia – where the STI prevalence and incidence rates among young Aboriginal people are persistently high [
2‐
5] despite the existence of primary health care, sexual health services and programs, and policy that prioritises STI control [
6‐
8] – improvement is dependent on high population coverage of regular repeat STI testing and earlier detection of infection and follow up.
Given high STI prevalence and incidence rates in the Northern Territory, national guidelines recommend twice annual testing, timely treatment and regular re-testing for STIs for sexually active young Aboriginal people aged 15–35 years [
6,
9]. In this setting most STI testing occurs through opportunistic screening, which relies on strategies that improve health seeking behaviours and the provision of safe, trustworthy clinic environments for clients. However, behavioural surveys and epidemiological research illustrates that STI testing and retesting after STI treatment is more common among young Aboriginal women than young men [
2,
3,
8,
10], and that younger people aged 16–19 years who have the highest STI prevalence are less likely to test than those aged 20–29 years [
10]. There is urgent need to understand how earlier, more frequent engagement in regular STI testing can be achieved among young Aboriginal men and women [
8,
11‐
13].
Rigorous qualitative research can provide in-depth insight into the factors underlying findings identified in survey-based and epidemiological research [
14]. Yet there exists a paucity of qualitative research examining sexual health among young Aboriginal Australians [
15]. No published qualitative literature explicitly documents factors influencing young Aboriginal people’s engagement with clinic-based STI testing, from their own perspectives. Barriers to STI testing are documented only briefly in papers focusing more generally on youth relationships and sexual health literacy [
16], sexual risk and resilience practices [
17‐
19], perceptions of health [
20], capacity building of sexual health workers [
21], engaging young people in sexual health research [
20], and sexual health education [
22]. This literature highlights young Aboriginal people’s concerns about a lack of confidentiality in health service provision; feelings of shyness, embarrassment and shame; the potential for reputational damage associated with STIs; and anxiety about waiting times and interactions with clinic staff [
16,
17,
19‐
22]. A more comprehensive understanding of these issues increases opportunities to provide young Aboriginal women and men with access to culturally safe sexual health support – where culturally safety relates to environments that are free from assault, challenge or denial of identity and needs, in which services are provided on the basis of shared respect, meaning, knowledge and experience, and where all people are listened to and treated with dignity [
23] – as advocated for by the ‘Fifth National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australian Blood-borne Viruses and Sexually Transmissible Infections Strategy 2018-2022’ [
24].
Drawing on data collected in 2015–16, this is the first qualitative study examining young Aboriginal people’s perceptions of the broad socio-ecological [
25] factors influencing their uptake of clinic-based STI testing in two remote settings in the Northern Territory, Australia. The aim of this paper is to provide case study evidence from two remote settings about the social processes influencing uptake of STI testing among male and female Aboriginal young people aged 16–21 years.
Methods
This interpretive qualitative study was a component of a larger study evaluating strategies to increase STI testing among Aboriginal people aged 16–29 years in the Northern Territory, Australia. Between October 2015 and November 2016, 35 young Aboriginal people – women and men, aged 16–21 years, resident in two remote settings
1 in the Northern Territory – participated in individual in-depth interviews. Findings from the study were shared in full with participating health services and informed the development of two strategies aimed at increasing clinic-based STI testing among young Aboriginal people, one of which is currently being evaluated. We used the COREQ checklist to report the methods we used in this study (Additional file
1: COREQ checklist).
Given that people in this age group are at highest risk of STIs and the hardest to engage in clinic-based STI testing [
1,
10], and the existence of clear gender differences in accessing STI testing services [
2,
3,
8,
10], young Aboriginal people were sampled purposively [
26] to reflect diversity by age and gender in each setting. Young people were eligible to participate if they identified as being Aboriginal, were aged 16–21 years and resident in each setting. Recruitment occurred face to face via introductions arranged by representatives of local health services and youth development organisations in setting 1, and by youth researchers in setting 2.
Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with young people, in person on an individual basis. In setting 1, interviews were conducted by two experienced adult researchers – SB (PhD, social science, non-Indigenous male researcher with no prior connection to either research setting) and WM (Research Officer, Aboriginal woman with previous youth work experience in this location). In this setting, respondents were not known to the interviewers prior to data collection. In setting 2, informed by an established peer research study design [
27], interviews were conducted by two adult researchers – SB and AL (Research Officer, Aboriginal man with previous youth work experience in this location) and six project-specific employed Aboriginal youth researchers aged 16–19 years who were recruited to undertake research with other young people in their local social networks. They participated in a four-day qualitative research training workshop covering semi-structured in-depth interviewing; applied research ethics, with a particular emphasis on confidentiality, anonymity, informed voluntary consent and the use of participant information sheets and consent forms; the use of a digital recorder; data management; and interviewee recruitment. They also received a further 14 days of intensive research support from SB and AL to enhance interviewing skills as data collection progressed. Youth researchers were known to AL but not known to SB prior to data collection; interviewees were known to youth researchers prior to data collection.
The topic guide (Additional file
2: Topic guide) was piloted with and adapted by youth researchers in setting 2 and covered three themes, including young people’s sexual experiences and relationships; STIs and risk practices; prevention, risk reduction and STI testing and treatment. The guide was designed around the use of ‘third person interviewing’ – i.e. not asking the interviewee to talk directly about themselves but about ‘other people like themselves’. This served several purposes in the two research settings: first, it facilitated more comfortable, less intimidating conversations about sexual health, a topic which many participants had rarely spoken openly about with other people beyond trusted networks; second, it enabled the collection of data about diverse perspectives and experiences that young people can experience in these settings; and third, it elicited the local meanings and consequences that young people attribute to and associate with social and sexual practices in these settings [
27]. Despite using a third person interviewing approach, all young participants also spoke about personal experiences, or the lived experiences of friends and peers. As such, in this paper we report on both young participants’ perceptions and experiences of engaging with STI testing services in these settings. Interviews took place in audio-private settings (e.g. private rooms in youth and sports organisations; at home on verandas and in gardens; under trees in public spaces), lasted between 25 and 90 min and were conducted in English. Debriefing occurred after each interview.
All interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, de-identified, checked for accuracy, and imported into QSR NVIVO V.12 qualitative data analysis software. Transcripts were not returned to participants for comment or correction. However, prior to analysis, and with support from SB, interview audio files were reviewed by adult and youth Aboriginal researchers involved in data collection for initial interpretation of data. Thereafter a thematic analysis was led by the first author, with support from JW, PA and LM, using a system of open and axial coding [
28] to examine young people’s perceptions of access to health services for STI testing. The analysis used a socio-ecological framework [
25] to examine individual (e.g. knowledge, attitudes), social (e.g. informal interactions within intimate, peer and family relationships), and health service (e.g. formal systems of health service delivery, clinic location) factors influencing access to STI testing. Further inductive analysis was undertaken to examine differences within these themes.
Participants were remunerated with either a AUD$30 local store voucher or AUD$30 mobile phone credit. Ethical approval was received from the Central Australian Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC 15–314).
Discussion
This is the first qualitative study to examine – from the perspectives of young Aboriginal Australians’ resident in remote Australia, and focussing on gender differences – multiple factors influencing young Aboriginal people’s engagement with clinic-based STI testing. We do so using socio-ecological analysis to highlight the individual, social and health service influences in two contrasting remote settings in the Northern Territory. Our findings illustrate the importance of strong family and community support for health service use, youth-friendly design of health service spaces and appointment procedures, efforts to minimise sexual stigma, and innovative sexual health outreach programs, particularly for young Aboriginal men, to reduce high rates of STIs and enhance engagement in clinic-based STI testing.
At an individual level, young women and men in both settings identified barriers to STI testing linked to limited knowledge and awareness of the transmission and prevention of STIs, and their often asymptomatic nature. Similar findings are reported in studies with other young people in Australia [
16‐
18,
22,
29‐
31]. Some participants identified further attitudinal barriers that inhibited or delayed STI testing for symptomatic STIs and a lack of skills to communicate about STIs with health service workers. Among other things, these findings reaffirm the inadequacy of skills-based relationships and sexuality education for young Aboriginal people in diverse settings [
15,
17,
22,
24,
32,
33], which is identified as an urgent priority in the latest national strategy [
24].
Beyond the individual level, social connectedness and interaction – especially with friends, peers and family – had divergent effects. In the remote community, women’s nights provided a safe space for young women to interact with older women and share advice about women’s health issues. Such social interactions outside clinic spaces enhanced young women’s individual knowledge and awareness of the issues. However, these informal social support networks also extended into clinic spaces. Accompanied visits to the clinic for women’s health issues – with support from sisters, cousins, aunts, mothers, grandmothers and close friends – enabled young women to gain experience of STI testing procedures under the guise of something else. In this setting, young women’s strong intergenerational, peer and family support networks reduced barriers associated with individual influences, limited the occurrence of social stigma associated with STIs, and enhanced access to and experience within clinic settings.
In contrast, for young people in setting 2, social connectedness and interaction within and outside clinic settings proved to be a barrier to STI testing. Without inter- and intragenerational social support, fear of being seen by, or having to converse with, peers, family or other community members in a clinic waiting room created anxiety and fear of being judged and maligned by peers and family. As reported in other studies in remote and regional Australia [
22,
34], teasing, name-calling and gossip within peer networks, and the reputational damage associated with rumours that spread beyond to families were detrimental to STI testing among young people in this setting. Here, the social connections within health service settings led to social processes beyond the clinic which discouraged engagement in clinic-based STI testing.
Health systems delivery influenced young people’s engagement with STI testing. Health promotion outreach strategies – delivered via a partnership between the government clinic and the government-led remote men’s health team – were reported by young men in setting 1 to enhance their willingness to attend the local clinic for STI testing. Ongoing discussion with male health workers during social and sports activities outside the clinic setting, and accompanied visits through the clinic, enhanced social connectedness between young Aboriginal men and male health workers. These strategies brought health services and social influences together and provided opportunities for young men to learn about sexual health issues; experience how to communicate with health professionals; initiate trusting relationships with clinic staff; and become more comfortable accessing formal clinic spaces.
In contrast, young people in setting 2 reported fewer opportunities (outside of a formal, anxiety-provoking clinic visit) to interact with health workers or knowledgeable and supportive friends and family members. As a result, they were not able to acquire the knowledge, language and skills required to negotiate access to a busy, centrally located service in which privacy could not be assured, and lacked both confidence and trust to do so. Nor were they able to acquire the skills to communicate comfortably with other people about issues pertaining to STIs, sexual health and personal sexual practices, for fear of stigmatisation by others. Additionally, in setting 2, the geographical location of the clinic, the nature of the clinic space (i.e. entry points, waiting rooms), appointment procedures (i.e. pre-booked versus drop-in procedures) and waiting times prior to appointments enabled peer and family surveillance of young people’s clinic attendance.
2 Young Aboriginal people’s fear of lack of confidentiality in health service provision, and concerns about waiting times and interactions with clinic staff have also been documented in other studies [
19‐
21,
35]. Here, the exacerbation of social barriers within clinic spaces illustrates the complex challenges of providing private and confidential, but culturally and socially safe clinic-based STI testing.
Limitations
While our sample of young people was large enough to allow ‘thematic data saturation’ [
28], data collection was limited to a small sample of young people resident in two settings in the Northern Territory. Therefore, care must be taken to not generalise beyond these settings. In addition, information was not captured regarding the reasons why participants declined to participate. Data collection by a range of interviewers may have increased the variation among individual responses, although ‘internal reliability’ [
36] was enhanced by interviewers working together during data interpretation and analysis processes to ensure rigour and consistency in data interpretation. Despite these limitations, study findings provide timely insights into the lived experiences of young Aboriginal people and their engagement with STI testing, signalling the range of socio-ecological factors that must be engaged with and addressed if testing is to be a success.
Implications for programmes and services
Given the high prevalence, incidence and poor health outcomes associated with STIs, and the need for extremely high levels of STI testing and treatment in these settings, our findings – when used in collaboration with other available published evidence documenting the expertise of other stakeholders including family members, health workers and policy makers – have implications for strategies designed to enhance young people’s access to STI testing in remote settings. These will help meet priorities identified in the national strategy [
24].
To overcome individual level barriers, action is needed to enhance young Aboriginal people’s communication skills, health seeking practices and understanding of asymptomatic STIs. Culturally responsive comprehensive relationships and sexuality education – in school, clinical, community and peer-based settings [
24], and with a focus on health literacy, interpersonal and negotiation skills to navigate healthy relationships and access health services [
37,
38] – would be beneficial, to upscale the limited current provision throughout the Northern Territory.
Action is also required to strengthen social support networks that include peers, families and other community members, and systems of health service provision to enhance young people’s access to and use of health services in remote settings. The women’s nights and the men’s health BBQs illustrate the value of activities that: (i) bring young people together in safe environments to talk about sexual health issues; (ii) involve supportive, trusted and influential family and community members in youth sexual health promotion activities; (iii) ‘nest’ STI-related services within broader systems of support for women’s and men’s health; (iv) enable young people to gain experience communicating with health workers in informal settings beyond the clinic environment. Accompanied clinic visits – with either health workers, friends, or trusted family members – can also facilitate culturally safe STI testing experiences.
There remain challenges to be faced however. These include how to reduce the social risks associated with young people’s clinic attendance, which is essential to the prevention, testing and management of STIs in this population [
24]. Several approaches are worthy of further exploration in this regard including: (i) health worker community outreach work and accompanied visits to health services; (ii) the provision of youth-only sessions to limit youth interactions with adult family and community members within the clinic waiting room, and reduce individual risk by facilitating group-based testing; (iii) service re-design research to understand how to eliminate the risky moments of interaction between young and other clients in clinic settings; (iv) messaging about the harms associated with rumour, gossip and reputational damage in communication campaigns.
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