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. 2017 Aug 11;7(8):e016202. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016202

Table 3.

Clinical workload in the participating clinics during participants recruitment period in Jakarta, Yogyakarta and Denpasar, Indonesia (January–December 2014)

Participating clinics City Staff (number) Recruitment period Total inclusion days* Sample analysis time† Number of samples Workload per hour‡
Clinic-based settings
 Clinic A Yogyakarta Dermatologist in training (2), nurse (1), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1) January–Apr and July 2014 34 204 71 0.35
 Clinic B Denpasar GP¶ (2), nurse (2), lab technician (1), counsellor (1) June–November 2014 68 408 258 0.63
 Subtotal 102 612 329 0.54
Outreach settings
 Clinic C Jakarta GP¶ (2), nurses (2), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1), counsellor (1–2) March–May, and October 2014 9 54 233 4.31
 Clinic D Jakarta GP¶ (2), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1), counsellor (1–2) March–May 2014 10 60 152 2.53
 Clinic E Yogyakarta GP¶ (2), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1–2), counsellor (1–-2) April–July 2014 7 42 68 1.62
 Clinic F Yogyakarta GP¶ (2), nurse (2), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1-2), counsellor (1-2) March–June 2014 10 60 100 1.67
 Clinic G Yogyakarta GP¶ (2), nurse (2), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1–2), counsellor (1–2) April–June 2014 7 42 85 2.02
 Clinic H Yogyakarta GP¶ (2), lab technician (1), assistant§ (1–2), counsellor (1–2) April 2014 3 18 25 1.39
 Subtotal 46 276 663 2.40

*Inclusion day is defined as the day when participating clinic recruited participants for the study (post hoc calculation).

†Sample analysis time is defined as total duration (in hours) of time spent in the participating clinics for analysing participants’ sample, estimated to be 6 hours/inclusion day regardless service setting (post hoc estimation).

‡Workload per hour is defined as average number of samples analysed per hour.

§Medical student trained in questionnaire administration of this study.

¶General practitioner trained in sexual health.

GP, general practitioner.