By
Ching Lee
August 21, 2002
As far as the serious consequences of sexually transmitted diseases go,
chlamydia is not exactly AIDS – or even herpes, for that matter.
But don’t let lack of public awareness dupe you into thinking the
increasingly common disease isn’t a serious health issue.
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
chlamydia is the most frequently reported infectious disease in the nation.
In Stanislaus County, it is also the most frequently reported sexually
transmitted disease.
Between 1991 and 1998, the county had been consistently reporting around
1,000 cases per year. In 1995, 914 was the lowest mark 1,062 in 1992 was
the highest.
According to county reports, these are low estimates, because many individuals
who are infected do not seek medical care or never get tested.
Because 80 percent of infected females and more than 50 percent of infected
males show no signs of the disease, Chlamydia therefore eventually became
known in medical circles as the “silent” disease.
But not for long, it is hoped.
Through aggressive awareness and screening programs, the Stanislaus County
Health Services Agency is trying to make sure that chlamydia doesn’t
remain silent any longer.
Implemented in 2000, the Chlamydia Awareness and Prevention Project and
the Chlamydia Testing and Screening Project are two ongoing county programs
being provided through a collaboration with the community health department
to control the spread of the disease.
The $62,000 budget for the two programs focuses on education –
as well as screening and testing at-risk individuals for the disease.
According to Sandra Rose, the county’s health educator and chlamydia
projects coordinator, CAPP involves going to schools, juvenile halls and
community-based organizations to talk about chlamydia and other STDs.
“The focus is on behavior,” said Rose of the program. “We
try to focus on behavior that put people at risk for the disease.”
Young people are the target of the program because the disease primarily
affects people in the 15-to-24-year-old age group; the majority of them
young women, Rose said.
Between 5 and 10 percent of all sexually active girls aged 15 to 19 years
may be infected with chlamydia.
Due to the physiology and cellular make-up of young women, they tend
to be more prone to getting infected when exposed to the disease, explained
Rose. Young women’s reproductive systems are less resistant to infections,
she added.
In phase one of CTSP, which was recently completed, the health department
screened 2,877 young people, out of which 252 were tested positive for
chlamydia.
“So it’s clearly a critical health issue,” Rose said.
In more recent provisional data from the county for 2001, the number
of chlamydia cases has gone up to 1,267. This data can actually be interpreted
as a good sign.
Since the county implemented the screening and testing program in 2002,
Rose believes the higher number of cases reflected in the county’s
provisional data may be caused by the increased testing and screening,
which means that the disease is finally shedding its traditional cloak
of silence.
According to Rose, the county most recently received federal funding
in the amount of $113,000 for the Community Health Action Project to continue
its education and awareness efforts on the disease.
Reprinted by permission of the Turlock Journal.
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