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Public Health
Seattle & King County
401 5th Ave., Suite 1300
Seattle, WA 98104

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Phone: 206-296-4600
TTY Relay: 711

Home » Press Release Archives » 02-16-05: Controlling STDs

New, local study shows innovative approach to control sexually transmitted diseases
Wednesday, February 16, 2005

KING COUNTY, WASHINGTON - A new study led by Public Health - Seattle & King County and published in tomorrow’s New England Journal of Medicine reports that a patient’s risk of sexually-transmitted disease (STD) reinfection decreases and the number of sex partners treated increases with a locally tested, innovative model of care.

The expedited care model gives STD patients diagnosed with gonorrhea or chlamydial infection medications to give to their sex partners, allowing a partner to get treated without first seeing a medical provider.

“This study suggests that many, and perhaps most, heterosexual patients should be offered medications to give to their sex partners,” said lead author Dr. Matthew Golden, Acting Director of the STD Control Program at Public Health - Seattle & King County and an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of Washington Center for AIDS & STD. “This expedited care model may help redesign the current national partner notification system to treat more partners. Currently, approximately half of gonorrhea or chlamydia patients’ sex partners do not get treated.”

“Public and private organizations have joined locally to carry out this groundbreaking public health study,” said Dr. Alonzo Plough, Director and Health Officer of Public Health - Seattle & King County. “Expedited care of partners of STD clients has immediate implications for the way we control and prevent STDs locally and has the potential to be expanded nationally.”

The study, conducted in partnership with researchers at the University of Washington and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), randomly assigned women and heterosexual men diagnosed with gonorrhea or chlamydial infections to either receive medications to give to their partners or the usual standard of advising clients to notify partners to make sure they seek medical care. Patients who received medications to give to their partners were more likely than those assigned to standard referral of partners to report that all of their partners were treated. Additionally, they were less likely to report having sex with an untreated partner.

Although many doctors give patients with STDs medications to treat their sex partners, the practice traditionally has not been endorsed by the CDC, public health departments, or medical professional organizations. The persistence of high rates of gonorrhea and chlamydial infection, coupled with a dissatisfaction with the current system which typically leaves patients to ensure their partners treatment without assistance, has prompted a public health debate on how best to treat partners.

The full article in the February 17, 2005 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, titled “Effect of expedited treatment of sex partners on recurrent or persistent gonorrhea or chlamydial infection,” is available to reporters by request.

For more information on Public Health – Seattle & King County’s STD Program, visit www.metrokc.gov/health/apu/std

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check it out

questionsSTD Fact Sheets Detailed summaries about chlamydia, herpes, gonorrhea, syphilis, and more.

immunizations iconWhere to get tested and treated for STDs
Visit Public Health's STD Clinic at Harborview Medical Center.

Safer Sex and Condoms

condom packetSafer sex means always using a latex barrier. This includes using a condom on a man or barrier protection such as plastic wrap, a dental dam, or cut condom for a woman.

the pillBirth Control Gallery
Photo-illustrated gallery of birth control options and descriptions on each use.

Updated: Wednesday, February 16, 2005 at 02:48 PM

All information is general in nature and is not intended to be used as a substitute for appropriate professional advice. For more information please call 206-296-4600 (voice) or TTY Relay: 711. Mailing address: ATTN: Communications Team, Public Health - Seattle & King County, 401 5th Ave., Suite 1300, Seattle, WA 98104 or click here to email us. Because of confidentiality concerns, questions regarding client health issues cannot be responded to by e-mail. Click here for the Notice of Privacy Practices. For more information, contact the Public Health Privacy Office at 206-205-5975.

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