Syphilis: It’s back, and with a vengeance

Diseases are a little like stock market fluctuations and economic booms and busts: they are cyclical.  Doctors like to tell us that their ministrations eradicate disease, but in truth they’re merely taking the credit for a downshift in the cycle.

It’s happened recently with TB, and now doctors are reporting an alarming increase in cases of syphilis.
Doctors were confident that they had defeated the sexually-transmitted disease by the 1980s.  Cases were low, and remained so, throughout the decade, but between 1997 and 2003 there has been a colossal increase, in some quarters as high as 1400 per cent.

The ‘at risk’ groups include homosexuals, prostitutes and drug users who inject – as it’s always been.
The one difference, doctors assume, is that people in the gay community are taking a more relaxed view about protective sex following the AIDS scare, which also happened to start in the 1980s.

The problem with cyclical diseases is that a whole new generation of doctors has arrived, and one which can’t easily identify symptoms of a health problem that had almost gone away.  Worse, they may even be unsure about how to treat it.

(Source: The Lancet, 2007; 369: 1912-4).


E-news broadcast 14 June 2007 No.368 [Subscribe]


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