Shira M. Goldenberg1, Jean A. Shoveller
1, Aleck Ostry
2, and Mieke Koehoorn
1. (1) Health Care and Epidemiology, University of British Columbia, 5804 Fairview Avenue, Vancouver, BC, Canada, (2) Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Victoria, Cornett Building, B332, 3800 Finnerty Road, Victoria, BC, Canada
Background:
Northeastern British Columbia, Canada is undergoing rapid in-migration of young male workers in response to a boom in the oil/gas industries. Accompanying the boom is a rise in Chlamydia rates among youth, which exceed the provincial average by 22%. STI testing reduces the disease burden, and evidence suggests that targeting STI testing at ‘core' populations such as oil/gas workers may have a disproportionately large impact on prevention.
Objective:
(1) To document youths' perceptions regarding the socio-cultural and structural forces that affect young oil/gas workers' access to STI testing; (2) To gather service providers' perspectives on sexual health service delivery for workers; and (3) To develop recommendations to improve the accessibility of STI testing.
Method:
We conducted ethnographic fieldwork (8 weeks) in a remote oil/gas community, including in-depth interviews with 25 young people (ages 15-25) and 14 health and social service providers.
Result:
Participants identified limited opportunities to access testing, geographic isolation, and ‘rigger' culture as 3 key categories inhibiting STI testing among oil/gas workers.
Conclusion:
In light of the rapidly expanding populations of transient young workers, the development of new interventions that ‘fit' with local context could have significant public health benefits.
Implications:
Current service delivery models require young oil/gas workers to overcome several barriers to obtain STI testing. Alternatively, we suggest an active model of STI outreach based on intersectoral partnerships (e.g., between public health, non-profit organizations, and oil/gas industry). We are working with public health and a sexual health promotion organization to develop innovative outreach strategies, including a locally tailored public awareness campaign, condom distribution, expanded clinic hours, and onsite STI testing. The current study and its corresponding response is a critical step in improving access to appropriate public health services for these geographically marginalized populations using a place-based approach.