Local gonorrhoea study under way
THE PLANNED study of the effectiveness of antibiotics in the treatment of gonorrhoea in Jamaica has started, with researchers at the University of the West Indies, Mona campus, joining colleagues around the world in trying to address this growing concern.
“The study looks at samples across a number of clinics islandwide. Four hundred swabs were done, and out of these, 54 were positive for gonorrhoea,” said Dr Alison Nicholson, head of the Department of Microbiology at the University of the West Indies.
“Now they will take those 50 samples and then test them for their sensitivity to antibiotics. This testing will not be done by the ordinary method. They are using molecular methods to test the sensitivity,” added Nicholson, as she noted that the latter process promises more efficient results.
The swabs were taken in collaboration with the Ministry of Health at facilities in Kingston and St Andrew, St Catherine, St Ann, St James, and Westmoreland.
RAISING AWARENESS
Now, Nicholson wants more to be done to raise the awareness of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in Jamaica.
“I don’t think many persons know about the gonorrhoea issue and the fact that this organism is actually leading the way in terms of causing concern,” said Nicholson as she pointed out that in some countries, certain STIs are becoming resistant to antibiotic treatment, mainly because patients and doctors have been misusing the drugs.
“Not all infections require antibiotics. It should be reserved for only when you suspect bacterial infections. But some people don’t even differentiate between different germs and it’s only if you have a bacterial infection that you should be taking antibiotics,” Nicholson had told The Sunday Gleaner in an earlier interview.
Nicholson and her team’s study is in keeping with the WHO guidelines issued last year, which mandated member states to check on the level of antibiotics resistance locally.