
Sarita Sonalkar
· M.D., M.P.H.VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 2009–2024
Research topics
- Medicine
- Family medicine
- Obstetrics
- Gynecology
- Intensive care medicine
- Nursing
- Environmental health
- Medical emergency
Selected publications
JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes · 2022 · 4 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Medicine
- Family medicine
- Nursing
BACKGROUND: Family planning and abortion clinics routinely address sexual health. We sought to evaluate implementation outcomes of an HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) care strategy for patients seeking management of induced abortion and pregnancy loss. SETTING: Single-center, urban, academic, hospital-based family planning service. METHODS: We used a multifaceted implementation strategy directed toward family planning providers comprised of educational sessions, an electronic medical record-prompted verbal assessment of HIV risk, electronic medical record shortcuts for PrEP prescription, and support of a PrEP navigator. We assessed penetration of the intervention by calculating the penetration of a PrEP offer, measured as the proportion of encounters in which PrEP was offered to PrEP-eligible individuals. We evaluated feasibility, acceptability, and appropriateness of the intervention using belief elicitation interviews with providers. RESULTS: From November 2018 to April 2019, the proportion of PrEP eligible patients who were offered PrEP, was 87.9% (29/33). Providers found the intervention acceptable and appropriate, but reported barriers including time constraints, and disappointment if patients did not adhere to PrEP. Providers liked that PrEP provision in abortion care settings felt innovative, and that they could contribute to HIV prevention. CONCLUSION: Family planning providers in an academic center found HIV risk assessment and PrEP provision to be feasible, acceptable, and appropriate. Further research should evaluate implementation outcomes of PrEP care strategies in additional abortion care contexts, including clinics offering reproductive health care outside of academia.
Contraception · 2021 · 9 citations
- Medicine
- Obstetrics
- Gynecology
Prioritizing Desiredness in Pregnancy of Unknown Location
Obstetrics and Gynecology · 2020 · 22 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Medicine
- Obstetrics
- Gynecology
Patient-centered care is one of the six aims for improvement in health care quality outlined by the National Academy of Medicine (previously known as the Institute of Medicine). We propose an algorithm for patients who are presenting with a pregnancy of unknown location that emphasizes pregnancy desiredness to improve patient-centered care. Health care professionals should assess pregnancy desiredness at a patient's initial consultation for evaluation of pregnancy of unknown location; desiredness, along with other clinical criteria, should guide management. For women with an undesired pregnancy, health care professionals should offer expedient active management. Uterine aspiration will allow for quick clinical diagnosis and resolution of the pregnancy. Alternatively, for women with a desired pregnancy or for those who are ambivalent, we recommend careful conservative management. Adopting this algorithm will recenter the patient in the complex management of pregnancy of unknown location.
Frequent coauthors
- 90 shared
Courtney A. Schreiber
University of Pennsylvania
- 85 shared
Mary D. Sammel
- 76 shared
Kurt T. Barnhart
University of Pennsylvania
- 67 shared
Esther Eisenberg
- 67 shared
Benjie B. Mills
University of Illinois Chicago
- 67 shared
Meredith Alston
Intermountain Healthcare
- 66 shared
Marcelle I. Cedars
University of California, San Francisco
- 66 shared
Emily S. Jungheim
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