Experts Are Bracing For A Spike In STDs, But Not Just Because It's 'Hot Vax Summer'
(CNN) -- After more than a year of Americans being urged to practice the safe six (feet), infectious disease specialists want to remind them about safe sex.
While different people reacted to pandemic safety guidelines in different ways, for some Americans, lockdown meant less sex. But as more vaccines are administered, social restrictions are getting relaxed -- and some people seem to be ready to make up for lost time by embracing their "hot vax summer."
Male condom sales shot up 23.4% to $37 million during the four weeks ending April 18, compared to the same stretch in 2020, according to market research firm IRI. That increase followed a 4.4% drop in all of 2020.
But while many see the further reopening of the economy as a sign that Covid-19 is less of a health crisis, there are other viruses and bacteria out there -- such as those that are sexually transmitted. And physicians warn a rise in STD cases is on the way. But that's not just because vaccinated singles are ready to mingle again.
Rates were already rising
Reported STDs in the United States reached an all-time high for the sixth consecutive year in 2019, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with more than 2.5 million cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis reported.
These reportable STDs increased by nearly 30% between 2015 and 2019, the agency said.
Experts told CNN these worrisome trends can be tied to several factors.
Dr. Hunter Handsfield, a professor emeritus of medicine at the University of Washington Center for AIDS and STD, told CNN one of those could be that people are using condoms less. He said this applies particularly to men who have sex with men because they see that layer of protection, plus selecting uninfected partners, as less important now that there are more tools to prevent HIV, specifically, pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP -- pills people at high risk can take to prevent infection.
There are also changed attitudes about sexuality.
"People currently in their teens and 20s, I think, there are different attitudes and beliefs about what constitutes a committed relationship and what doesn't," Handsfield said.
Additionally, there are more resources to meet sexual partners, including dating apps, which have less of a stigma compared to years past.
The CDC notes high infection levels can also be impacted by obstacles to prevention and care, such as poverty, unstable housing or lack of a medical home.
Add a pandemic that requires health care systems to reallocate staff from STD prevention to helping fight a deadly respiratory virus and these problems get exacerbated.
Numbers don't tell the whole story
The CDC says preliminary 2020 data suggest many of these concerning trends continued into 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted STD testing and treatment services.
In a September press briefing, Dr. Hilary Reno, a medical consultant with the Division of STD Prevention at the CDC, detailed how the pandemic led to a dramatic drop in STD testing last year.
BJC HealthCare, one of the main hospitals in the St. Louis metro region, saw testing decline after the first positive Covid-19 case in March, Reno said. After the city issued stay-at-home orders, testing for gonorrhea and chlamydia dropped 45%. Reno added this amounted to about 4,400 missed gonorrhea and chlamydia tests in a 10-week period in this region.
HIV testing had a similar pattern, with an estimated 5,000 missed tests in the same period, Reno said.
Handsfield told CNN it is difficult to know for sure what really happened to the number of STD cases during the peak of the pandemic.
"The notion that there is a risk that they will rebound, to me, makes a certain amount of sense. But it's with that caveat that we really don't know very well how to interpret the data behind those observations," Handsfield said.
Testing also may have increased pre-pandemic.
Dr. Kees Rietmeijer, former director of the STD Control Program at the Denver Public Health Department, pointed out to CNN that, like Covid-19, "the more you test, the more you find." But unlike coronavirus cases, the number of negative STD tests is not reported, so the positivity rate isn't known.
Not all sex stopped
One way sexually transmitted infections are like Covid-19 is that many cases are asymptomatic, said Dr. Julie Dombrowski, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Washington who also does research on HIV and STI clinical and public health services.
That means the decrease in testing resulted in a number of STDs that went undetected and untreated, which presumably led to some ongoing transmission, Dombrowski told CNN. She noted chlamydia is especially an issue in this case, as it is usually asymptomatic and can lead to infertility and other reproductive issues.
And while some people may have been less sexually active during the pandemic, not all sex stopped, so those pre-pandemic infections didn't just disappear.
Dr. Edward Hook, a professor of medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told CNN part of maintaining sexual health is realizing these infections are more common than many people think.
"Nobody wants to think they've got a sexually transmitted infection or going to get one," he said.
Rietmeijer echoed Hook, pointing out that the approach to treating STDs has focused on the clinical aspect, rather than the individual and societal impacts, such as inequity in health care and a stigma that can hinder people from taking preventative measures seriously.
A National Academies of Sciences, Engineering Medicine report, which Hook and Rietmeijer worked on, said "the national response to STIs must also consider the root causes of poor health," which range from racism and poverty to social stigma.
A lack of timely diagnosis or preventative measures can lead to dangerous consequences.
For example, human papillomavirus (HPV), can cause cervical cancer, head and neck cancer, and cancers of the anus and penis.
The good news is, STDs are preventable and treatable.
Preventative measures
Vaccines are recommended for protection against hepatitis B and HPV. The HPV vaccine is recommended for preteens ages 11 or 12 and everyone through age 26, though it's approved for anyone through age 45. The hepatitis B vaccine is recommended for infants at birth, with the series of shots being completed at 6 months. It's also recommended for certain unvaccinated adults, such as those with sexual partners who have hepatitis B.
The CDC recommends everyone from ages 13 to 64 be tested at least once for HIV. But people at higher risk, which includes men who have sex with men, should get tested more often. Those men should get tested every three to six months. Anyone else who has unsafe sex should get tested for HIV at least once a year.
All sexually active women younger than 25 years should be tested for gonorrhea and chlamydia every year, according to the agency's guidance. All pregnant women should be tested for syphilis, HIV and hepatitis B starting early in pregnancy. All men who have sex with men should be tested at least once a year for syphilis, chlamydia and gonorrhea. (You can look for a place to get tested near you with the CDC's GetTested tool.)
Hook said another element of maintaining good sexual health involves having a conversation with sexual partners.
"Hopefully people are interested in each other's health as well as their own," he said. "Increasingly, although not increasingly enough, we are seeing and we continue to encourage couples who are thinking about or planning to initiate sexual activity, or even couples who have just recently begun sexual activity together, to go together to be screened for STIs."
The-CNN-Wire
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