Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ensuring patients receive appropriate (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-recommended) and prompt (≤14 days of specimen collection) treatment is critical to decrease gonorrhea and early syphilis (ES) incidence. The objectives were to (1) quantify treatment performance among community health care providers (CHPs), (2) compare CHP treatment performance to local health department goals, and (3) describe variation in treatment performance by CHP characteristics in Baltimore City, Maryland. METHODS: Surveillance data for gonorrhea and ES diagnoses reported between January 2018 and December 2019 were used. Treatment performance measures were calculated for each CHP (gonorrhea: 171 CHPs; ES: 122 CHPs). Measures were (1) percent treated among all diagnoses (goal: ≥90%), (2) percent appropriately treated among diagnoses treated (goal: ≥90% gonorrhea, ≥95% ES), and (3) percent promptly treated among diagnoses appropriately treated (goal: ≥85%). Treatment performance measures and achievement of goals were compared across CHP characteristics. RESULTS: For gonorrhea, median percent treated, appropriately treated, and promptly treated were 71.4%, 95.0%, and 100.0%, respectively; 29.8% met treated goals. The majority achieved appropriately treated (62.9%) and promptly treated (76.8%) goals. Community health care practices reporting high (vs. low) volume of gonorrhea diagnoses less frequently achieved percent-treated goals (12.2% vs. 35.4%, P = 0.008). Median value for all ES treatment performance measures was 100.0%. Most achieved treated (90.2%) and appropriately treated (95.9%) goals. Less than half (49.2%) achieved the promptly treated goal. Community health care practices reporting high (vs. low) volumes of ES less frequently achieved promptly treated goals (33.3% vs. 54.4%, P = 0.045). CONCLUSIONS: Substantial gaps in reporting gonorrhea treatment and prompt ES treatment were observed. Practice-level interventions to facilitate reporting gonorrhea treatment and provide prompt ES treatment are needed.