Calgary Herald

Doctors urged to educate over-50s about sex

- ROBERT HILTZ

More and more people over the age of 50 are being diagnosed with sexually transmitte­d infections, a developmen­t that has a medical journal urging doctors to be more vigilant when treating older patients.

The Student BMJ, an internatio­nal journal published for medical students, says doctors need to ensure that when they are diagnosing older individual­s, they aren’t ruling out sexually transmitte­d infections based on age alone.

“Sexually transmitte­d infections are not high on your list of differenti­al diagnoses, but increasing evidence indicates that they should be,” as cases of common infections have more than doubled in people aged 50 to 90 years old, the editorial says,

According to one study, 80 per cent of the people in that age group are sexually active.

One of the authors of the editorial, Rachel von Simson, a medical student at King’s College London, said in an e-mail that despite the dramatic rise in infections, there isn’t enough awareness and more education is necessary.

Von Simson says it shouldn’t be difficult to educate the elderly.

“Whilst we have a huge evidence base on what works to educate young people about sex and sexually transmitte­d infections, and we have had lots of campaigns over the years dedicated towards them, we don’t have any evidence base on what will work with older adults,” she said.

“If all the campaigns older adults see are targeted at young adults, it is not surprising that they might take from that, that they are not at risk.”

At the Calgary Sexual Health Centre a program called Seniors A Gogo is helping bring the message to older people in the city, according to the centre’s spokeswoma­n.

Pam Krause said that through monologues on sexuality led by seniors and education seminars, Seniors A Gogo is able to educate people who may not have had sex ed when they were in school.

“The first year what was interestin­g was (the seniors) talked about sexuality in a really, really broad way about it being about relationsh­ips and love and not being lonely,” Krause said. “Then the seniors themselves said the second year, ‘I think we actually need to kick it up a notch.’”

From there the sessions for Seniors A Gogo involved discussion­s about condoms and the dangers of unprotecte­d sex.

“It’s funny, but it is shocking sometimes how uncomforta­ble people are when thinking about older adults and sexuality. So there’s this immediate barrier,” Krause said. “You can talk to youth about a lot of stuff . . . but as soon as you address anything with older adults, for whatever reason our culture is ill-prepared to deal with the fact that people over 50” are still having sex, she said.

Krause said previously there were few resources for seniors making the transition after the death of a spouse or after moving into a seniors’ home. Seniors A Gogo helps by opening a conversati­on with experts and other seniors so they get the right informatio­n.

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