Bangkok Post

STIs surge in Europe, with gonorrhoea jumping 48%

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LONDON: Sexually transmitte­d infections surged across Europe in 2022, with reported cases of gonorrhoea jumping by nearly half, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control said as it released its most recent data on Thursday.

Syphilis cases rose by 34% from the previous year to more than 35,000, and chlamydia cases by 16% to more than 216,000. Gonorrhoea cases jumped by 48% to more than 70,000.

“The numbers paint a stark picture, one that needs our immediate attention and action,” said ECDC director Andrea Ammon in a press conference on the data.

Untreated STIs can lead to a range of health problems, including chronic pain, i nfertility and, f or syphilis, neurologic­al and cardiovasc­ular complicati­ons.

Cases of lymphogran­uloma venereum (LGV) and congenital syphilis, when the infection is transmitte­d from mother to foetus, also increased sharply, the ECDC said, although from lower levels.

Rates of STIs have been rising for years in many countries, including in Europe, although this was stalled by the Covid-19 pandemic as most government­s imposed social isolation measures, people stayed home and reporting rates fell.

A number of reasons were behind the sustained rise, the ECDC said, including better surveillan­ce and a rise in home testing as well as an increase in riskier sexual behaviour.

A leap in infections among young heterosexu­al people in the latest data, and particular­ly young women, could be due to a change in sexual behaviour post-pandemic, the EU agency said.

It said there was no evidence yet that the rise in gonorrhoea infections was due to antimicrob­ial resistance but said it would continue to monitor this. Dr Ammon said the numbers were likely the “tip of the iceberg” as many infections go undetected.

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