新生儿梅毒病例再次增多令人担忧,因此美国卫生官员呼吁加强预防措施,包括鼓励数百万育龄女性及其伴侣接受性传播疾病检查。
美国疾病预防控制中心(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)周二表示,2022年,美国有超过3,700名婴儿患有先天性梅毒,比10年前增加了10倍,比2021年增长了32%。梅毒造成282例死胎和夭折,几乎比2012年增加了16倍。
疾控中心的官员称,2022年先天性梅毒患儿的数量创30多年最高,而且有超过一半先天性梅毒病例的母亲在孕期检测呈阳性,但并没有得到妥善治疗。
疾控中心的官员表示,虽然公共卫生部门反复警告,但先天性梅毒病例仍不断增多,这与成年人原发病例和继发病例激增有关。而且由于苄星青霉素供应短缺,医疗提供商为患者注射这种治疗先天性梅毒的主要药物变得越来越难。
疾控中心的劳拉·巴赫曼博士表示:“显然出现了一些问题,必须做出改变。因此我们呼吁采取非常措施,以应对这种令人心碎的流行病。”
该联邦机构希望医疗提供商在孕妇首次梅毒检测呈阳性时就开始治疗,而不是等到确认性测试才开始治疗,并扩大交通服务的服务范围,使女性能够得到治疗。疾控中心呼吁除了医生诊所和性传播疾病诊所以外,在急诊室、针头交换项目、监狱等其他场所提供快速检测。
联邦政府官员再次建议有性行为的育龄女性及其伴侣,如果生活在高发病率地区,至少应该进行一次梅毒检测。根据美国疾控中心的最新地图和定义,美国70%的成年人生活在高发病率地区。美联社根据联邦数据估计,这一数字可能高达数千万。
疾控中心的建议是:联邦政府没有更多资金帮助州和地方卫生部门支持或普及梅毒检测。一些州的卫生部门已经表示,在治疗和预防方面的资金紧张,但伊利诺伊州上周表示,将为医疗提供商开通一条热线,以帮助档案检索、咨询和协助强制报告等。
梅毒是一种细菌感染,几个世纪以来,一直是一种常见且可怕的性传播疾病。上世纪40年代,随着抗生素的普及,美国的新增梅毒感染人数大幅下降,到90年代末降至最低水平。到2002年,梅毒病例再次增多,尽管这种性传播疾病正在多个群体内传播,但存在同性性行为的男性受影响的情况最严重。
先天性梅毒由母亲传播给婴儿,可能造成婴儿死亡,或失聪、失明和骨骼畸形等健康问题。各种族和民族的先天性梅毒发病率都在增长。
阿拉巴马大学伯明翰分校(University of Alabama at Birmingham)传染病专家迈克·塞格博士表示,梅毒对女性而言可能是一种“隐性感染”,因为如果不进行血液检测很难诊断,并非所有人都会出现无痛性溃疡、疣状病变或其他明显的症状。
美国疾控中心一直建议所有孕妇在首次产检时进行梅毒检测,但由于产前检查不够普及,尤其是在美国的农村地区,导致孕妇很难进行梅毒检测。疾控中心称,去年近40%先天性梅毒病例的母亲没有接受产前检查。
如果在孕期提早诊断出梅毒,只要注射一次青霉素,就能消除梅毒被传播给婴儿的风险。但专家表示,越到孕晚期,需要多次注射青霉素的可能性越高,而且必须在分娩前至少30天完成注射。
密西西比州芒德拜龙德尔塔健康中心(Delta Health Center)的妇产科医生妮娜·拉古纳森博士表示:“我有一些患者的治疗方案是注射三次,但漏掉了一次。她们想完成注射,但如果由于交通问题、工作问题、儿童看护问题等各种原因导致她们无法回来就诊,她们无法不间断地注射三次,就视为没有完成治疗。”
此外,美国的卫生官员对美联社称,注射药剂短缺导致很难减少梅毒患者的数量。未怀孕的梅毒患者可以使用抗生素强力霉素进行治疗,但卫生官员担心,患者很难完成14至28天的治疗期限,导致感染者无法治愈。
辉瑞(Pfizer)是美国唯一的青霉素供应商。今年早些时候,辉瑞的高管表示,由于需求增长,青霉素供应不足。辉瑞还表示,供应不足的情况可能要到明年才有望解决。
疾控中心表示,青霉素供应不足并不影响2022年的先天性梅毒病例数量,而且尽管有供应不足的情况,但它并未了解到有患者无法得到必要针剂的情况。(财富中文网)
亨特亚特兰大报道。
美联社健康与科学部得到了霍华德休斯医学研究所(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)科学教育媒体部和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会(Robert Wood Johnson Foundation)的支持。美联社对所有内容全权负责。
翻译:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
新生儿梅毒病例再次增多令人担忧,因此美国卫生官员呼吁加强预防措施,包括鼓励数百万育龄女性及其伴侣接受性传播疾病检查。
美国疾病预防控制中心(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)周二表示,2022年,美国有超过3,700名婴儿患有先天性梅毒,比10年前增加了10倍,比2021年增长了32%。梅毒造成282例死胎和夭折,几乎比2012年增加了16倍。
疾控中心的官员称,2022年先天性梅毒患儿的数量创30多年最高,而且有超过一半先天性梅毒病例的母亲在孕期检测呈阳性,但并没有得到妥善治疗。
疾控中心的官员表示,虽然公共卫生部门反复警告,但先天性梅毒病例仍不断增多,这与成年人原发病例和继发病例激增有关。而且由于苄星青霉素供应短缺,医疗提供商为患者注射这种治疗先天性梅毒的主要药物变得越来越难。
疾控中心的劳拉·巴赫曼博士表示:“显然出现了一些问题,必须做出改变。因此我们呼吁采取非常措施,以应对这种令人心碎的流行病。”
该联邦机构希望医疗提供商在孕妇首次梅毒检测呈阳性时就开始治疗,而不是等到确认性测试才开始治疗,并扩大交通服务的服务范围,使女性能够得到治疗。疾控中心呼吁除了医生诊所和性传播疾病诊所以外,在急诊室、针头交换项目、监狱等其他场所提供快速检测。
联邦政府官员再次建议有性行为的育龄女性及其伴侣,如果生活在高发病率地区,至少应该进行一次梅毒检测。根据美国疾控中心的最新地图和定义,美国70%的成年人生活在高发病率地区。美联社根据联邦数据估计,这一数字可能高达数千万。
疾控中心的建议是:联邦政府没有更多资金帮助州和地方卫生部门支持或普及梅毒检测。一些州的卫生部门已经表示,在治疗和预防方面的资金紧张,但伊利诺伊州上周表示,将为医疗提供商开通一条热线,以帮助档案检索、咨询和协助强制报告等。
梅毒是一种细菌感染,几个世纪以来,一直是一种常见且可怕的性传播疾病。上世纪40年代,随着抗生素的普及,美国的新增梅毒感染人数大幅下降,到90年代末降至最低水平。到2002年,梅毒病例再次增多,尽管这种性传播疾病正在多个群体内传播,但存在同性性行为的男性受影响的情况最严重。
先天性梅毒由母亲传播给婴儿,可能造成婴儿死亡,或失聪、失明和骨骼畸形等健康问题。各种族和民族的先天性梅毒发病率都在增长。
阿拉巴马大学伯明翰分校(University of Alabama at Birmingham)传染病专家迈克·塞格博士表示,梅毒对女性而言可能是一种“隐性感染”,因为如果不进行血液检测很难诊断,并非所有人都会出现无痛性溃疡、疣状病变或其他明显的症状。
美国疾控中心一直建议所有孕妇在首次产检时进行梅毒检测,但由于产前检查不够普及,尤其是在美国的农村地区,导致孕妇很难进行梅毒检测。疾控中心称,去年近40%先天性梅毒病例的母亲没有接受产前检查。
如果在孕期提早诊断出梅毒,只要注射一次青霉素,就能消除梅毒被传播给婴儿的风险。但专家表示,越到孕晚期,需要多次注射青霉素的可能性越高,而且必须在分娩前至少30天完成注射。
密西西比州芒德拜龙德尔塔健康中心(Delta Health Center)的妇产科医生妮娜·拉古纳森博士表示:“我有一些患者的治疗方案是注射三次,但漏掉了一次。她们想完成注射,但如果由于交通问题、工作问题、儿童看护问题等各种原因导致她们无法回来就诊,她们无法不间断地注射三次,就视为没有完成治疗。”
此外,美国的卫生官员对美联社称,注射药剂短缺导致很难减少梅毒患者的数量。未怀孕的梅毒患者可以使用抗生素强力霉素进行治疗,但卫生官员担心,患者很难完成14至28天的治疗期限,导致感染者无法治愈。
辉瑞(Pfizer)是美国唯一的青霉素供应商。今年早些时候,辉瑞的高管表示,由于需求增长,青霉素供应不足。辉瑞还表示,供应不足的情况可能要到明年才有望解决。
疾控中心表示,青霉素供应不足并不影响2022年的先天性梅毒病例数量,而且尽管有供应不足的情况,但它并未了解到有患者无法得到必要针剂的情况。(财富中文网)
亨特亚特兰大报道。
美联社健康与科学部得到了霍华德休斯医学研究所(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)科学教育媒体部和罗伯特·伍德·约翰逊基金会(Robert Wood Johnson Foundation)的支持。美联社对所有内容全权负责。
翻译:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
NEW YORK — Alarmed by yet another jump in syphilis cases in newborns, U.S. health officials are calling for stepped-up prevention measures, including encouraging millions of women of childbearing age and their partners to get tested for the sexually transmitted disease.
More than 3,700 babies were born with congenital syphilis in 2022 — 10 times more than a decade ago and a 32% increase from 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday. Syphilis caused 282 stillbirth and infant deaths, nearly 16 times more than the 2012 deaths.
The 2022 count was the most in more than 30 years, CDC officials said, and in more than half of the congenital syphilis cases, the mothers tested positive during pregnancy but did not get properly treated.
The rise in congenital syphilis comes despite repeated warnings by public health agencies and it’s tied to the surge in primary and secondary cases of syphilis in adults, CDC officials said. It’s also been increasingly difficult for medical providers to get benzathine penicillin injections — the main medical weapon against congenital syphilis — because of supply shortages.
“It is clear that something is not working here, that something has to change,” the CDC’s Dr. Laura Bachmann said. “That’s why we’re calling for exceptional measures to address this heartbreaking epidemic”
The federal agency wants medical providers to start syphilis treatment when a pregnant woman first tests positive, rather than waiting for confirmatory testing, and to expand access to transportation so the women can get treatment. The CDC also called for rapid tests to be made available beyond doctors’ offices and STD clinics to places like emergency rooms, needle-exchange programs and prisons and jails.
Federal officials again advised sexually active women of childbearing age and their partners to get tested for syphilis test at least once if they live in a county with high rates. According to a new CDC map and definition, 70% of U.S. adults live in a county with high rates. That’s likely tens of millions of people, according to an Associated Press estimate based on federal data.
The CDC’s recommendations are just that; there is no new federal money going out to state and local health departments to bolster testing or access. Some state health departments have already said they’re stretched thin when it comes to treatment and prevention, though Illinois announced last week it was starting a phone line for health care providers to help with record searching, consultation and assistance with mandatory reporting.
Syphilis is a bacterial infection that for centuries was a common but feared sexually transmitted disease. New infections plummeted in the U.S. starting in the 1940s when antibiotics became widely available and fell to their lowest mark in the late 1990s. By 2002, cases began rising again, with men who have sex with other men being disproportionately affected, though the STD is spreading among several demographics.
In congenital syphilis, moms pass the disease on to their babies, potentially leading to death of the child or health problems for the child like deafness, blindness, and malformed bones. Case rates have been rising across racial and ethnic groups.
Dr. Mike Saag, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said syphilis can be “a silent infection” in women because it’s tricky to diagnose without a blood test — not everyone gets painless sores, wart-like lesions or other visible symptoms.
The CDC has long recommended that all pregnant women should be tested for syphilis at their first prenatal visit, but poor access to prenatal care — largely in rural areas of the U.S. — can make that difficult. Nearly 40% of last year’s congenital syphilis cases involved mothers who didn’t have prenatal care, the CDC said.
If syphilis is diagnosed early in a pregnancy, the threat of passing it to the baby can be removed by a single penicillin shot. But experts say the later you get into pregnancy, the more likely you’ll need multiple shots, and they have to be completed at least 30 days before delivery.
“I have had patients who have been on (a three-shot) regimen who then miss a shot,” said Dr. Nina Ragunanthan, an OB/GYN at the Delta Health Center in Mound Bayou, Mississippi. “So they are trying to get their shots, but if they don’t get the three in a row, because of transportation issues, because of job issues, child care issues, any number of reasons that prevent them from coming back, they don’t complete their treatment.”
Plus, the shortage of shots makes the task of getting syphilis numbers down difficult, health officials across the U.S. told the AP. Patients who are not pregnant can use the antibiotic doxycycline to treat syphilis, but health officials are concerned that the 14- to 28-day timeline of treatment is difficult to complete, leaving infected people uncured.
Pfizer is the nation’s sole supplier of the penicillin shot. Earlier this year, company officials said it was in short supply because of increased demand. Pfizer also said the shortage may not be resolved until next year.
The CDC said the shortage didn’t affect the 2022 congenital syphilis case numbers and that, despite the shortage, it isn’t aware of patients not getting their needed shots.
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Hunter reported from Atlanta.
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.