Greece reports increase in syphilis and gonorrhea
High-risk sexual behaviors are multiplying and concern an ever wider part of the general population-EODY
The Hellenic National Public Health Organization (EODY) in Greece reports an increase in syphilis and gonorrhea cases for the period of 2020-2022 in a newsletter this week.
The Annual Epidemiological Reports of the STD Department of EODY, in the period 2020-2022, an increase of 113.36% has been recorded for cases of early syphilis and of 120.73% for cases of gonorrhea.
Specifically, in the year 2022, there were 8.26 new syphilis diagnoses per 100,000 population and 3.45 new gonorrhea diagnoses per 100,000 population.
Regarding syphilis, 93.04% of the cases were men, aged mainly between 25 – 64 years and in 72.16% the mode of transmission involved sexual contacts between men and other men. For gonorrhea, 95.86% of the cases were also men, aged mainly between 25 – 44 years, while the mode of transmission seems to be divided between men having sex with other men (47.24%) and with women (46.41%).
Syphilis and gonorrhea are reliable indicators of the trend and other STDs, as well as the sexual attitudes of the population.
It seems, therefore, that high-risk sexual behaviors are multiplying and concern an ever wider part of the general population. This makes STDs a priority for ensuring Public Health and the imperative to control spread and prevent transmission, EODY notes.
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In recent years, a significant increase in STDs has been observed both at the global and European level, as well as in our country. Based on data from the CDC in the USA in the period from 2017 to 2021, an overall increase in STDs of the order of 7% was observed. In particular, syphilis cases increased by 28.6% and gonorrhea cases by 4.6%, during the two years 2020 – 2021. According to the data obtained from the corresponding reports of the European Center for Disease Control and Prevention (ECDC) for 2021, based on where there is a significant increase in syphilis and gonorrhea cases, of the order of 7 and 13.7 new diagnoses per 100,000 population, respectively.