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The New York Times
health
Sex Diseases Still
Rising; Chlamydia Is Leader
By LAWRENCE K.
ALTMAN, nytimes.com on the Web, November 14, 2007
The incidence of gonorrhea, which had
declined sharply, has risen in the last two years in this country while the
number of chlamydia and syphilis cases continue to rise, federal health
officials said yesterday.
Chlamydia and gonorrhea are the two most common diseases among those doctors
must report in the United States. And the 1,030,911 cases of chlamydia in
2006 are the highest ever recorded for any nationally reported disease in any
year, the officials said in releasing their annual report on sexually
transmitted diseases. They said that because of underreporting, a more
accurate estimate is 2.8 million new chlamydia cases annually.
About 19 million new cases of all kinds of sexually transmitted diseases occur
in this country each year, but only the three are nationally reported.
Genital herpes, papillomavirus and trichomonas infections account for the vast
majority of cases, but doctors are not required to report them nationally.
Different reasons account for the rise of each of the three reportable and
curable diseases, and for each a different approach is needed to reduce its
incidence, Dr. John M. Douglas Jr., head of the division of sexually transmitted
diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told reporters by
telephone.
The three reported sexually transmitted diseases affect African-Americans
disproportionately. The black to white ratios are gonorrhea 18 to 1,
syphilis 6 to 1 and chlamydia 8 to 1, Dr. Douglas said in an interview.
The reasons for the disparities are not clear. Lack of access to health
care may be one problem.
“Chlamydia is now the most common S.T.D. ever reported,” Dr. Douglas said, but
not by much. The next most common is gonorrhea, with just over one million cases
reported each year from 1976 to 1980. The peak for gonorrhea was 1,013,00.
Gonorrhea cases then declined steadily.
The chlamydia microbe can cause pelvic inflammatory disease and resulting
abdominal pain, ectopic pregnancy and infertility in women.
Chlamydia’s rise in incidence is due mainly to urging by the centers for annual
testing of sexually active women under age 26. Current tests are more
sensitive in detecting chlamydia than those used a few years ago. Most
cases were among women who had no symptoms but could transmit the microbe.
Chlamydia screening has led to detection of the microbe among more men as their
female partners advise them to get tested and treated to avoid re-infections.
Infected individuals are advised to get re-tested about three months after
treatment to make sure they are cured.
The centers are also encouraging doctors to give antibiotics and educational
material to patients to give to their sexual partners who are reluctant to seek
care. One aim of the practice, called expedited partners therapy, is
to reduce re-infections. The practice is legal in 11 states and ambiguous or
illegal in the 39 others.
From 1975 through 1997 the reported rate of gonorrhea dropped 74 percent, then
plateaued, only to rise the last two years to 358,366 cases in 2006. The
centers estimate that at least twice that number actually occurred.
Much of the rise seems the result of an increasing tendency to couple gonorrhea
and chlamydia testing of urine samples.
African-Americans account for 69 percent of all gonorrhea in this country.
“The biggest increase in gonorrhea regionally has been in the South, and we do
not have a ready explanation for that,” Dr. Douglas said.
Even in the days before penicillin became available in World War II to cure
syphilis, the number of reported syphilis cases peaked at 575,000, and that
total included individuals who never could be treated and developed the late
stages of the disease that cause brain and heart damage.
Syphilis cases dropped to their lowest ever total in 2000 soon after health
officials had announced a national syphilis elimination program.
But cases have risen each year since then to 9,756 cases in 2006. Most
cases have involved gay men, who account for about 65 percent of cases, and to a
lesser extent women. Also, a small number of cases have occurred among
newborns.
Recently, health departments have had to take on more projects with little, if
any, increase in budgets, Dr. Douglas said. Outbreaks have occurred in
some areas where they were well controlled. Also, health workers have had
to decrease partner notification programs and screening in detention centers and
jails.
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