Brandi Danforth
5 Papers
Brandi Danforth is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine. The author has co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Trends in Syphilis Partner Services Outcomes among Women in 8 US Jurisdictions, 2015-2022.
Anna B Cope,Victoria Mobley,Erika Samoff,James Matthias,Brandi Danforth,Mohammad Rahman,Jill C. Diesel,James B Kent,Christine Convery,River A. Pugsley,E. Klingler,Felicia M T Lewis,R Madera,Madeline Sankaran,T. Q. Nguyen,Nicole L Davis +15 more
TL;DR: Between 2015-2022, syphilis cases increased among US women, with 88% assigned for partner services, >90% interviewed, and >94% treated; however, the proportion of women reporting locatable partners and treated partners decreased over time.
Trends in patient's use of sexual health services during COVID-19 in a network of STD clinics, STD Surveillance Network, 2019- 2021.
Eloisa Llata,Christina Schumacher,Brandi Danforth,Preeti Pathela,Lenore Asbel,Trang Huyen Nguyen,Anna Berzkalns,Kristen Kreisel +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors describe use patterns by patient characteristics, and the use of telehealth (TH) services among a network of sexually transmitted disease (STD) clinics among seven jurisdictions who contribute STD visit-level data as part of the STD Surveillance Network.
Infection positivity among sexual contacts to chlamydia and gonorrhea, STI Surveillance Network, 2021-2023.
Eloisa Llata,Brandi Danforth,Jennifer Tang,Lenore Asbel,Christopher Ried,Madison Clark,Anna Berzkalns,Christina M. Schumacher +7 more
Behavioral and Demographic Profiles of HIV Transmission and Exposure Networks in Florida: Network Analysis of HIV Contact Tracing Data.
Yiyang Liu,Christina E. Parisi,Chaoyue Sun,Rebecca Fisk-Hoffman,Marco Salemi,Diego Viteri,Brandi Danforth,Mattia Prosperi,Simone Marini +8 more
Evaluation of Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance System Electronic Laboratory Processing in Florida: Automating Case Creation, Reporting, and Closure of Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Cases
TL;DR: In this article , the authors developed processes and algorithms for processing electronically received laboratory results for chlamydia and gonorrhea and evaluated the potential to save thousands of hours of staff time.