Jul 17
Regular chlamydia tests urged for young people (Reuters)
Everyone should use a condom with a new partner to the time when both consider been screened, the agency warned as it published figures showing the number of sexual diseases diagnosed in Britain rose 6 percent last year.
Young people were disproportionately affected, said Peter Borriello, Director of the HPA's Centre for Infections.
"Substantial numbers of young people remain undiagnosed, untreated and inattentive of the risk they pose both to their own health and that of their sexual partner," he added.
People advanced in life 18-24 form just one in eight of the population but account for around half of all newly diagnosed sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the UK.
This age group suffered 65 percent of entirely chlamydia cases, 55 percent of all genital warts and 50 percent of gonorrhoeae infections diagnosed in genito-urinary clinics last year.
The total number of STIs diagnosed reached 397,990 in 2007, up from 375,843 the year before.
Borriello said one thinking principle for the rise could be an increase in the number being screened.
More than one million sexual freedom from distemper screens were conducted in 2007, ten percent more than in 2006.
"If sustained, this could have a significant impact on the control of sexually transmitted infections," said Borriello.
"However, we cannot rely on prompt diagnosis and treatment alone — a shift in behavior is the only way that we enjoin bring down this continued grow in infections."
Nearly one in 10 sexually active young women tested by a chlamydia screening programme in England last year were found to have the infection, which can cause pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy and infertility.
One in 12 men was in addition found to be carrying the disease, the world's most common sexually transmitted infection.
A study by University College London last November showed that one in five youthful Britons has sex with a new partner when traveling abroad.
(Reporting by dint of. Tim Castle; Editing by Steve Addison)
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