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Gonorrhoea cases in south west rocket by 166 per cent

Gonorrhoea cases in south west rocket by 166 per cent

Health chiefs have issued a stark warning to sexually active adults across the south west following a huge 166 per cent in gonorrhoea cases. The number of cases of syphilis also rocketed by 32 per cent compared to 2021, with the overall number of cases of sexually transmitted diseases (STI’s) rising by 33 per cent.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) is now reminding everyone having sex with new or casual partners to wear a condom and get tested regularly – whatever their age or sexual orientation. New UKHSA data shows numbers of new STI diagnoses in 2022 in the south west increased by 33% in comparison with 2021 (from 21,017 to 27,932). However, this is a 21.5% decline compared with the numbers seen five years ago (35,590 in 2018 to 27,932 in 2022).

The rise in STIs follows a decline in diagnoses during the coronavirus pandemic because of disruption to sexual health services and changes in behaviour which may have reduced transmission. Most STIs are easily treated with antibiotics, but many can cause serious health issues if left untreated.

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Chlamydia and gonorrhoea can cause infertility and pelvic inflammatory disease, while syphilis can cause serious, irreversible and potentially life-threatening problems with your brain, heart, or nerves. Health chiefs say Infection rates for gonorrhoea in the south west are of particular concern.

Diagnoses of gonorrhoea rose by 166% between 2021 (1575) and 2022 (4185) and 67% over the past five years (2499 in 2018 to 4,494 in 2022). Cases of syphilis increased by 32% between 2021 (262) and 2022 (347) with a 13% decrease over the past five years (400 cases in 2018 to 347 in 2022).

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While the increase in gonorrhoea and syphilis diagnoses will in part be due to increases in testing, the scale of the increase in diagnoses strongly suggests high levels of STI transmission within the population. Norah O’Brien, Sexual Health Facilitator for UKHSA South West said: “The rise in sexually transmitted infections, particularly gonorrhoea in the south west is concerning.

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  • June 9, 2023