Syphilis cases rapidly increasing
TOKYO: Japan has a rapidly increasingly number of syphilis patients, including among young women, prompting the health ministry to launch a special research team to find out ways to stop the spread of the sexually transmitted infection.
According to data based on reports filed by hospitals across Japan, the number of syphilis patients totalled 4,259 as of early December, up 77% from 2,412 in the corresponding period a year earlier, and more than seven-fold from a decade ago.
The infection is believed to have spread mainly through heterosexual intercourse. But the number of mother-to-child transmissions, which has been very rare in Japan, is also on the rise.
The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare has been urging people who feel they may have been infected to be tested immediately as the disease can be transmitted despite the absence of symptoms.
Factors such as changes in sexual behaviour among youth and adult entertainment businesses, as well as an increase in the number of tourists from countries with high infection rates of the disease are often cited as likely causes behind the spread, but it remains unclear why it has been so rapid over the past decade.
Currently, doctors ask syphilis patients to file reports in accordance with laws on infectious diseases. The reports require the patients’ age and gender but not specific information such as the sufferer’s nationality or occupation.
Infections are especially rife in Tokyo’s Shinjuku Ward where numerous entertainment and nightlife businesses operate, with the number of syphilis patients reported by hospitals in the ward accounting for 40% of Tokyo’s total, and 20% of cases across the whole of Japan.
Shinjuku Ward’s healthcare centre is encouraging hospitals in the ward to ask patients if they had engaged in work at adult entertainment businesses and their nationality to find out major infection routes.
The research team launched by the health ministry plans to verify how the spread of the infection took place by the end of March next year by cooperating with hospitals with high infection rates of the disease in Tokyo.
Makoto Onishi, a section chief at the National Institute of Infectious Diseases who heads the research team, said: “We intend to clarify which groups of people are at most risk and stop the spread of the infection by educating about how to prevent and cure the disease.”
The primary stage of the disease presents minor tumours in affected areas, such as genitals, but symptoms often disappear. In the secondary phase around three months later, patients suffer rashes, frequently involving the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, but the symptoms often disappear again. If no medical treatment is sought, the infection can bring inflammation around three years later, possibly causing damage to their brain and heart.