More Than 500 Million People Have Genital Herpes Virus
Main Category: Sexual Health / STDsArticle Date: 02 Oct 2008 - 2:00 PDT
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3 (3 votes) |
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3.33 (3 votes) |
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More than 500 million people are infected worldwide with the virus that causes genital herpes and more than 20 million people become newly infected each year, according to a study published in the international public health journal, the Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
Herpes simplex virus type 2 is commonly spread through sexual contact and leads to lifelong infection. While painful genital ulcerations are the classical symptom, most people have mild symptoms and don't know that they are infected. These persons can thus unknowingly infect others.
"Serious consequences include an increased risk of acquiring, and likely transmitting, HIV, and transmission from infected mothers to their babies during birth, which can cause brain damage and death," says Dr George Schmid, Department of HIV/AIDS at the World Health Organization.
This first-ever estimate of the global burden found that roughly 16% of the world's population in the 15-49 year-old age group were infected, with considerable geographic variation. Women are more commonly infected than men, with the highest prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa where up to 70% of women are infected.
The Bulletin of the World Health Organization is an international journal of public health with a special focus on developing countries. It is one of the world's leading public health journals and the flagship periodical of the World Health Organization.
Read the study here.
Other key articles this month can be found here.
Exclusive interview with former WHO director-general, Dr Halfdan Mahler, on the 30th anniversary of the launch of primary health care and a separate report on its origins. See here.
Investigation into outbreak of severe kidney failure caused by contaminated cough syrup in Panama. See here
Call for broader access to surgical solutions for morbidly obese people in Chile. See here
Indian study shows that home visits save babies in days following birth. See here
Serious lack of mental health services for adolescents in Mexico City. See here
Mass treatment of schoolchildren aims to reduce the 200 million people infected with schistosomiasis, a water-borne parasitic disease that is prevalent in 74 countries. See here
The Bulletin's table of contents can be found here.
WHO
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/123926.php>
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Director, Herpes Viruses Association, UK
posted by Marian Nicholson on 2 Oct 2008 at 6:18 amWe deplore the stigma expressed or implied by articles such as this. Until a vaccine is invented there is no way to prevent the spread of herpes simplex since: it is very common; most people don't know that they have it; it is also contracted through oral sex off a cold sore. Stating that there is an increased risk of acquiring HIV presupposes the 'sufferer' is having unprotected sex with an HIV+ person: this is not common outside Africa.
The risk of a woman catching herpes simplex just before giving birth (when there is a transmission risk) is extremely rare, just 0.34% in an Australian survey. [Mindel A. STI 76:287-291 (2000)]
Obviously a few badly affected people will need treatment for the physical symptoms, but for the majority it is just 'the horrible name' that is affecting them: they have been conditioned to consider this as a problem for their future happiness. It is time to stop hyping up herpes.
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