A Model Practice must be responsive to a particular local public health problem or concern. An innovative practice must be -
Please state the Responsiveness and Innovation of your practice
The rates of sexually transmitted disease rates are skyrocketing in the United States. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1.7 million cases of chlamydia were diagnosed in 2017, a 22% increase since 2013. In the same year, 555,608 cases of gonorrhea were diagnosed, a disconcerting 67% increase since 2013.
At 30,644 cases diagnosed in 2017, syphilis numbers are clearly lagging behind chlamydia and gonorrhea. Until recently largely considered a scourge of the past, syphilis is clearly a distant third when compared to chlamydia and gonorrhea. However, the 30,644 cases represent a distressing 76% increase in four short years.
If syphilis is not treated quickly with antibiotics, it can become secondary syphilis, which can include a skin rash, swollen lymph nodes and fever. During the latent, or tertiary stage, there are no signs or symptoms, but the disease can damage internal organs and may eventually lead to death.
Early-stage syphilis can present with a sore or several sores, but these can go unnoticed. However, if treated early with antibiotics, syphilis can easily be cured. Therefore, getting people who have specific risk factors for syphilis tested early is vital to avoid long-term disease, which can lead to organ damage and even death.
In West Virginia, the rise of syphilis rates can be connected to a variety of behaviors and factors depending on the location. These include drug use, prostitution and itinerate workers who seek companionship when they are away from home.
Thanks to field work conducted by a state public health investigator, when Monongalia County Health Department learned of an uptick in syphilis cases in the county seat of Monongalia County, West Virginia, officials were able to learn very specific information about not only the demographics of people who were almost exclusively being affected, but also the behaviors that made syphilis and other STIs more likely.
It turned out that almost all the new cases were in men ages 24 to 28 who have sex with men. Furthermore, many of them participated in anonymous sexual hookups facilitated via dating apps.
Using a dating app, partners could meet up in a public location, have intercourse and never see each other again, let alone know the other person’s name.
Previously, when a patient presented with an STI, the health care provider or public health investigator could get a list of names of other partners who might be infected. In today’s modern world, this has become more and more difficult.
Dr. Lee B. Smith, MCHD’s executive director and the county health officer, decided to seek help from the companies that create the very services being utilized for these hookups.
Remembering a presentation about a decade ago at a global health conference in which public health providers in sub-Saharan Africa negotiated for 2% of cell phone airtime to be devoted to medical messaging, Dr. Smith explored a way to adapt that to the syphilis outbreak in Morgantown.
Grindr, a dating app geared toward the LBGTQ+ community, was the only organization to offer to run a free public service announcement. A representative of Grindr noted “we want to do our best to protect the health and safety of our clientele.” A new MCHD web page was created that detailed what syphilis is, the symptoms, how to prevent it and also connecting people to MCHD’s free STD testing and treatment.
As previously stated, determining a figure to assign to the target audience is challenging; so too is figuring out the percentage of that population that was actually reached. Also, the only user numbers Grindr will release is it has 4.5 million active daily users worldwide.
Counting the LBGTQ+ population in the United States historically has been a difficult task leading to inexact numbers. Secondly, the affected population is only a small portion of that number because the LBGTQ+ population is being broken down to a small age group, one gender and a very specific set of behaviors.
Even with numbers for Grindr subscribers and free users, it would be very difficult to pinpoint how many of them were in the 50-mile radius of Morgantown during the message’s run who may or may not have opened the app.
However, the initial response exceeded expectations of MCHD staff. The message was posted once a week in the first month. In the first two weeks, after the message had appeared twice, Grindr reported that 9,500 unique individuals had seen the message, and that 11.7% of them had clicked through to the newly created web page. According to Google AdWords, Google’s advertising system, a 2% click-through-rate (CTR) is considered average. Using that as a gauge, this initial CTR was nearly six times higher than average.
After one month, the frequency of the ad was reduced to once a month for Grindr’s paid subscribers and twice a month for free users. The PSA continued to run at that level of frequency for six months, for a total of seven months.
At the end of November, the final numbers provided by Grindr were a total of 66,000 unique users who saw the ad, with an overall CTR of 7.16%, which is still more than three times the average CTR.
According to MCHD’s Grindr contact, Grindr has worked with approximately 30 health organizations, which include health departments in the United States, health ministries and other broad-based health organizations all over the world.
However, gauging by the response of public health officials who have learned about the partnership between MCHD and Grindr, this avenue of advertising is not one that is well-known.
MCHD’s public information officer created a poster on the project that was presented at the West Virginia Public Health Association’s annual conference in September. This conference was attended by NACCHO officials. Soon after, Dr. Smith was asked to write a blog and record a podcast on the project for NACCHO.
MCHD was told that the podcast and blog generated a lot of interest among NACCHO members as well as the media. More exact numbers were not available. The blog and podcast led to Dr. Smith being interviewed by a reporter for Politico, which ran a story detailing this project as well as similar ones done with other dating apps. Buzzfeed also was prepared to do a story but decided not to after being scooped by Politico.
Once the decision to connect with Grindr had been made, creating the project was very easy. Grindr wrote the message based on information provided by MCHD and on their knowledge of their consumer base. The PIO created a new web page on syphilis, making sure that it not only targeted the demographic in question, men who have sex with men, but also pregnant women, who should be tested for syphilis, as well as the general population, who also face risks of getting the disease.
So, while this practice is not evidence-based, it’s utilizing a cutting-edge and modern approach to reach specific populations. As technology progresses, it will be interesting to see how public health officials can create similar campaigns that use current trends to reach their intended targets.