Table 2:
Organization | Recommendation |
---|---|
Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care (current guideline, 2021) | We recommend opportunistic screening of sexually active individuals younger than 30 yr, who are not known to belong to a high-risk group, annually, for chlamydia and gonorrhea, at primary care visits, using a self- or clinician-collected sample (conditional recommendation; very low-certainty evidence). |
Public Health Agency of Canada (2020)22 |
Chlamydia Screening for Chlamydia trachomatis is recommended for anyone with risk factors for infection. Screening recommendations for the detection of C. trachomatis: Annual screening:
|
Public Health Ontario (2018)25 |
Gonorrhea Offer screening to asymptomatic sexually active individuals with risk factors for gonorrhea. In Ontario, risk factors for gonorrhea of particular importance among those with unprotected sexual exposure include:
|
Ministère de la santé et des services sociaux du Québec (2019)26 |
Chlamydia Screening at least annually is recommended for:
Screening at least annually is recommended for:
|
US Preventive Services Task Force (2014)84 |
Sexually active women The USPSTF recommends screening for chlamydia in sexually active women aged 24 years and younger and in older women who are at increased risk for infection (Grade B recommendation). The USPSTF recommends screening for gonorrhea in sexually active women aged 24 years and younger and in older women who are at increased risk for infection (Grade B recommendation). Sexually active men The USPSTF concludes that the current evidence is insufficient to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for chlamydia and gonorrhea in men (I statement). |
Public Health England (2018)85 |
Chlamydia Annually or on change of sexual partner, tests should be offered to men and women younger than 25 years who have ever been sexually active. Providers should use every opportunity to offer chlamydia screening across primary care and access to services for sexual and reproductive health and genitourinary medicine. |
Australasian Sexual Health Alliance (2018)86 |
Test for chlamydia in the following situations:
|
Note: NAAT = nucleic acid amplification test, STI = sexually transmitted infection, USPSTF = United States Preventive Services Task Force.