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Contact Tracing clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04971967 Completed - Contact Tracing Clinical Trials

Enhancing Partner Services Among Men Who Have Sex With Men Living With HIV

Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Individuals will participate in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) that implements and evaluates the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of crowdsourced partner services (PS) or conventional PS among Chinese men who have sex with men (MSM) living with HIV. The pilot RCT will include 120 newly identified MSM HIV cases who were born biologically male, aged 18 years old or older, newly identified as HIV positive, had oral or anal sex with a man, had at least one sexual partner in the previous 6 months and live in Guangzhou. Participants will undergo a series of computer-based interviews (baseline and 2 months after enrollment) and will be randomly assigned into two groups in 2:1 ratio (intervention: control) and receive crowdsourced PS and conventional PS, respectively.

NCT ID: NCT00207571 Completed - Contact Tracing Clinical Trials

Partner Notification Intervention for STD Clinics.

Start date: April 2001
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To help public health professionals (DIS) in interviews of patients infected with STD for the names of their sex partners, this project used a computer-based partner elicitation program before the actual DIS interview. The main outcome was the mean number of partners named by those who had the intervention versus those those who did not.

NCT ID: NCT00207493 Completed - Chlamydia Infection Clinical Trials

The Participant Agreement for Contact Tracing (PACT) Study: Enhancing Partner Notification Services.

Start date: October 2000
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Patients diagnosed with chlamydial infections (a sexually transmitted disease) are asked to notify their sex partners and tell them to seek medical evaluation. This project tests an enhancement to the materials provided to patients to help convince their partners to seek evaluation against the standard of care, which is a brief notification instruction. The desired outcomes are greater levels of notification by participants of their partners and lower levels of reinfection among participants.