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Wednesday, February 27, 2008


SF DPH Report:
Big Declines in 2007 Gay STD Numbers
In late January the SF DPH released the last monthly STD report for the city. The very encouraging preliminary year-end numbers for 2007 showed extremely welcome news of falling STDs across the board, except for HIV stats at the city's main STD testing site.
Then on February 21 DPH released the January monthly surveillance report, which included analysis of the raw figures for 2007.
"In 2007, declines were noted for all reportable STDs in San Francisco. Reported gonorrhea declined 19% from 2006 to 2007 from 2469 cases to 2008. Rectal gonorrhea among men also declined from 557 cases to 489 -- a 12% decline.
"Declines in syphilis were also found. Primary and secondary syphilis declined 17% in 2007 from 243 to 202; all early syphilis also declined by 16% in 2007. [...]
"Overall chlamydia declined from 4050 to 3937 (3%) while rectal chlamydia increased in 2007 from 512 to 592 for a 16% annual increase. We are exploring why rectal chlamydia cases increased in 2007 and rectal gonorrhea declined."
The monthly report omitted discussion about adult male shigellosis, which fell by 20%, from 99 to 78 cases; speed-related visits at SF General Hospital for males fell 17%, from 488 down to 402; for female visits there was a drop from 113 to 111.
The HIV figures from the primary STD testing site on Seventh Street, which are not the full numbers for the city but certainly represent a significant portion of the tests and results that comprise the city's overall HIV infection rate, increased by 12 percent, from 102 to 115.
However, the figure for number of antibody tests performed at this one clinic skyrocketed 58%; from 3,097 to 5,283. I think we can safely attribute the rise in HIV infections to the corresponding jump in tests.
The STD numbers, and probably the HIV stats too, are on a downward spiral in the double-digits, a positive development in the control and prevention of sexual infections, in a city where the overwhelming majority of STDs are seen in the gay and bisexual male communities.
But the double-digit drops are not of any particular interest to the many HIV and gay health groups in town, a judgment based after surveying their web sites and finding no mention of the plummeting figures.
Given the hopeful new stats illustrating lots of sexual safety and responsibility occurring among gay men, I would think especially after the worldwide media hysteria and gay community bashing generated by UCSF's staph infection study and press release, that HIV and gay health organizations would find a way to finally say something positive about gay men. But they all remain stonily silent about the decreasing 2007 STD numbers.
Actually, I wish someone would remind me of the last time these professional and well-financed health advocacy organizations said anything nice about gay men in San Francisco. Is there a commandment that says "Thou shall never offer positive reinforcement of responsible sexual practices of male homosexuals"?
I wish DPH and AIDS Inc would explain to me why they never offer a pat on the community's collective back for reductions in HIV and STDs, meth-related ER visits too. Here's a radical notion. DPH and its partners find ways to applaud the strengths of gay male health indicators in the near future.
It may be naive of me to say this, but I hope all the mainstream and gay news outlets that are on the DPH mailing list for STD reports soon cover the 2007 stats. Such media attention may be just the thing to force an end to the institutional complacency at HIV and gay health service groups.

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