U.S. sets record in sexual disease cases

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More than 1 million cases of chlamydia were reported in the United States last year — the most ever reported for a sexually transmitted disease, federal health officials said Tuesday.

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said they think better and more intensive screening accounts for much of the increase, but added that chlamydia was not the only sexually transmitted disease on the rise.

Gonorrhea rates are jumping again after hitting a record low, and an increasing number of cases are caused by a "superbug" version resistant to common antibiotics.

Syphilis is rising, too. The rate of congenital syphilis — which can deform or kill babies — rose for the first time in 15 years.

"Hopefully we will not see this turn into a trend," said Dr. Khalil Ghanem, an infectious diseases specialist at Johns Hopkins University's School of medicine.

The CDC releases a report each year on chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis, three diseases caused by sexually transmitted bacteria.

Chlamydia is the most common. Nearly 1,031,000 cases were reported last year, up from 976,000 the year before.

The count broke the single-year record for reported cases of a sexually transmitted disease, which was 1,013,436 cases of gonorrhea, set in 1978.

Putting those numbers into rates, there were about 348 cases of chlamydia per 100,000 people in 2006, up 5.6 percent from the 329 per 100,000 rate in 2005.

Since 1993, the CDC has recommended annual screening in sexually active women ages 15 to 25. Meanwhile, urine and swab tests for the bacteria are getting better and are used more often, for men as well as women, said Dr. John M. Douglas Jr., director of the CDC's Division of Sexually Transmitted Disease Prevention.

About three-quarters of women infected with chlamydia have no symptoms. Left untreated, the infection can spread and ultimately can lead to infertility. It's easily treated if caught early.

Health officials believe as many as 2.8 million new cases may actually be occurring each year, he added.

Chlamydia infection rates are more than seven times higher in black women then whites, and more than twice as high in black women than Hispanics. But it's a risk women of all races should consider, CDC officials said.

"If (health care) providers think young women in their practice don't have chlamydia, they should think again," said Dr. Stuart Berman, a CDC epidemiologist.

The gonorrhea story is somewhat different.

In 2004, the nation's gonorrhea rate fell to 112.4 cases per 100,000 people in 2004, the lowest level since the government started tracking cases in 1941.

But since then, health officials have seen two consecutive years of increases. The 2006 rate — about 121 per 100,000 — represents a 5.5 percent increase from 2005.

Health officials don't know exactly how many superbug cases there were among the more than 358,000 gonorrhea cases reported in 2006. But a surveillance project of 28 cities found that 14 percent were resistant to ciprofloxacin and other medicines in the fluoroquinolones class of antibiotics.

Similar samples found that 9 percent were resistant to those antibiotics in 2005, and 7 percent were resistant in 2004. The appearance of the superbug has been previously reported, and the CDC is April advised doctors to stop using those drugs against gonorrhea.

Douglas said it doesn't look like the superbugs are the reason for gonorrhea's escalating numbers overall, but they're not sure what is driving the increase.

Other doctors are worried. The superbug gonorrhea has been on the rise not only in California and Hawaii, where the problem has been most noticeable, but also in the South and parts of the Midwest.

"Suddenly we're starting to see the spread," Ghanem said.

Syphilis, a potentially deadly disease that first shows up as genital sores, has become relatively rare in the United States. About 9,800 cases of the most contagious forms or syphilis were reported in 2006, up from about 8,700 in 2005.

The rate rose from 2.9 cases per 100,000 people to 3.3, a 14 percent increase.

For congenital syphilis, in which babies get syphilis from their mothers, the rate rose only slightly from the previous year to 8.5 cases per 100,000 live births.

SOURCE

 
Not what we want to be number one in. What is distressing to me is that these are STD's so if they are rising then HIV probably is also since it's spread the same way. 25 years of public education and we are no further along than we were. I don't know what the answer is.

 
I can't say they're "problems," but there's a few things I've noticed from the time I was in say the 5th grade, until my sister hit the 5th grade.

For one, sex education was no longer a separate "class." When I was in school, we actually brought home permission slips for our parents to allow us a one week course in sexual education. My sister didn't have anything like that! It was considered part of health class, and I'm sure it wasn't as in depth.

Something else, IMHO, is the way sexuality slaps us in the face with every turn. Commercials have innuendos, movies, TV shows, various types of media just slap us in the face with it, but out of everything, the only thing that tells you to be safe is the damned Trojan commercial! How often do you see people stopping in action to grab the condom? Hardly ever! Even commercials for medication for herpes has couples sounding so damned cheery about having herpes! WTF! Um, no!

Like I said, they're not problems, but I don't think sex education is being taught the way it was before, and to me, that makes a difference. Being able to know what happens if you're not safe (i.e. seeing pics, reading true stories about it, etc), makes a difference. When you're young, you're convinced STDs can't happen to you... But that's obviously ignorance.

So, to me, I can almost see how it happens. I could be very wrong in everything I just said, but I don't think at least one person wouldn't agree with at least one thing I said. It's still a sad sick thing all around though.

 
No I think you are absolutely right. Nothing is as it used to be. Parents dont talk to their kids. Schools cut out sex ed. We are bombarded and innundated with everything sexual. Young people in particular still suffer from the "It can't happen to me" syndrome. I used to feel that way too. Invincibility starts to go futher and further away the older you get. It's all so unnecessary with the information that is available and so readily available these days.

 
This is why I never slept around before meeting my husband. I was too afraid of the risk of contracting something... and I was raised in an ultra-conservative home, that might have had something to do with it.

But you know, as much as we like to zero in on the youths, it's truly not fair to lay blame squarely on them. The longer a person's sexual history is, the more chances that the person has contracted something at some point. This is reflected in the numbers of 40+ year olds who have been diagnosed with HIV, other STDs, and yes, even unwanted pregnancies. I believe Oprah had a very informative show about this a year or two ago.

 
that is crazy
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my mom made me read std books when i was just 13 so that is not too new to me, but i recommend to everyone that if you are going to have sex with someone both you and your partner MUST get std tested for both the throat and genitals depending on your histories.

if everyone could do this, numbers for stds would drop dramatically!!!

 
I never slept around either, mostly because it's not my thing, but now I'm glad I didn't cause I guess the city I live in either has the most ghonnorrea and clamydia in the US, or the fastest growing. It's disgusting how much it grew, cause it just takes one person to infect someone.

Ugh, it just pi**es me off that people don't go get tested and pass it on to others like that. Whatever.

 
ive done all my papers for school this semester on adolescents and educating them about stds, sex, prevention. youd be shocked at some of the research out there.

im going to school for social work. and i want to work with teens and help educate them. the way i put it in my term paper is "the youth is our future, they are the ones that are supposed to take care of us when we are old & sick, so whos gonna take care of them while they are sick?"

 
Sorry, but this really doesn't surprise me. The word "abstinence" is non-existent for many, and using protection is considered an "inconvenience".

 

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