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Here you will find news and events about positivefriends.com - as well as news about HIV, HPV, Herpes, Hepatitis, and AIDS. I’ll also be posting random other health and technology news that I find interesting.
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Sunday
02Nov2008

Dr. Rachel Needle in Details Magazine

PositiveFriends.com health information specialist, Dr. Rachel Needle, was featured in this month’s issue of Details Magazine. As a sex therapist, Dr. Rachel Needle sees a number of different types of patients, with a variety of problems. This article in particular focuses on how she was able to help a husband and wife work on and eventually resolve the husbands psychogenic erectile dysfunction. Psychogenic erectile dysfunction is when a man is unable to get or maintain and erection, not because of physical reasons, but as a result of psychological factors.

Dr. Rachel Needle specializes in sexual dysfunction, sexual compulsiveness, and relationships, and is the author of Ask Dr. Rachel on PositiveFriends.com.

Thursday
05Jun2008

CDC Release: While Teen Sexual Activity Increases, Contraceptive Use Decreases

healthy_youth_subpage.gifThe CDC just released it’s 2007 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System.  This report has some startling new information about the number of high school teens having sex, and their contraceptive use.

47.8% of high school teens say they have had sex, which is an increase of 2% between 2005 and 2007.  During that same time period, the proportion of those who say they used a condom during their last sexual experience decreased 2%.

The survey also reports that 7.8% of high school teens have been forced to have sex and 9.9% report having experienced dating violence.  These percentages are relatively unchanged between 2005 and 2007. 

The CDC’s Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System is administered every two years to over 14,000 high school students nationwide and includes information on high school students’ sexual behavior, drug, alcohol and tobacco use.  (The study also includes everything from guns in school to dietary/obesity trends).

Some other stats from the YRBSS:

  • 7.1% had their first sexual experienced before the age of 13
  • 14.9% had four or more sexual partners during their lifetime
  • 35% have had sexual intercourse with at least one person during the 3 months before the survey (currently sexually active)
  • 38.5% of those that are currently sexually active did not use a condom during their last sexual intercourse, and only 16% are currently using the pill.
  • 22.5% either used drugs or drank alcohol while having sex
  • 89.% of students have been taught in school about AIDS or HIV, and 12.9% have been tested
Saturday
31May2008

Nationally Representative CDC Study Finds 1 in 4 Teenage Girls Has a Sexually Transmitted Disease

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Chicago (March 11, 2008) – A CDC study released today estimates that one in four (26 percent) young women between the ages of 14 and 19 in the United States – or 3.2 million teenage girls – is infected with at least one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases (human papillomavirus (HPV), chlamydia, herpes simplex virus, and trichomoniasis). The study, presented today at the 2008 National STD Prevention Conference, is the first to examine the combined national prevalence of common STDs among adolescent women in the United States, and provides the clearest picture to date of the overall STD burden in adolescent women.

Led by CDC’s Sara Forhan, M.D., M.P.H., the study also finds that African-American teenage girls were most severely affected. Nearly half of the young African-American women (48 percent) were infected with an STD, compared to 20 percent of young white women.

The two most common STDs overall were human papillomavirus, or HPV (18 percent), and chlamydia (4 percent). Data were based on an analysis of the 2003-2004 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

“Today’s data demonstrate the significant health risk STDs pose to millions of young women in this country every year,” said Kevin Fenton, M.D., director of CDC’s National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention. “Given that the health effects of STDs for women – from infertility to cervical cancer – are particularly severe, STD screening, vaccination and other prevention strategies for sexually active women are among our highest public health priorities.”

“High STD infection rates among young women, particularly young African-American women, are clear signs that we must continue developing ways to reach those most at risk,” said John M. Douglas, Jr., M.D., director of CDC’s Division of STD Prevention. “STD screening and early treatment can prevent some of the most devastating effects of untreated STDs.”

CDC recommends annual chlamydia screening for sexually active women under the age of 25. CDC also recommends that girls and women between the ages of 11 and 26 who have not been vaccinated or who have not completed the full series of shots be fully vaccinated against HPV.

The study of STDs among teenage girls is one of several presented today at the 2008 National STD Prevention Conference that highlights the significant burden of STDs among girls and women, and identifies creative prevention strategies for reducing the toll of STDs in the United States.

Contraceptive services represent missed opportunities for STD screening, prevention

Two other studies featured at the conference point to missed opportunities for STD testing, and underscore that it is critical for STD screening to be included in comprehensive reproductive health services for young women.

A study by CDC’s Sherry L. Farr and colleagues found that while the majority of sexually active 15- to-24 year-old young women (82 percent) receive contraceptive or STD/HIV services, few receive both (39 percent). In addition, only 38 percent of a subset of young women who reported receiving contraceptive services associated with unprotected sex (e.g., pregnancy testing) also received STD/HIV counseling, testing or treatment, which indicates that many women at high risk are not receiving necessary prevention services.

A separate study, by CDC’s Shoshanna Handel and the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, examined STD screening rates among young women seeking emergency contraception, which would suggest recent unprotected sex. The study found that just 27 percent were screened for chlamydia or gonorrhea. A significant proportion of those women (12 percent) had a positive test result, highlighting the need for routine chlamydia and gonorrhea screening at emergency contraception visits.

Innovative programs provide models for effective STD prevention

Other research from the conference highlighted creative programs that are effectively screening and treating people with STDs, and identifying those most at risk.

A CDC-funded confidential chlamydia screening program in high school-based health clinics in California resulted in high rates of screening among those seeking contraceptive or STD services (range: 85-94 percent). It also revealed significantly higher infection rates among African-American women than white women (9.6 percent versus 1.7 percent).

A study by New York City health officials assessed the effectiveness of an express visit option, allowing patients at city clinics to be tested for STDs without a doctor’s exam. Comparing data before and after express visits were routinely offered, researchers found that the express visit option made it possible for an additional 4,588 tests to be performed, and increased STD diagnoses by 17 percent (2,617 versus 2,231).

Monday
03Mar2008

Nerve.com article features PositiveFriends.com

nerveFrontLogoNew.gifA few weeks ago I received a phone call from Nerve.com writer, Lynn Harris.  Harris was doing research for her article, Searching for Normal.  Do dating websites for people with STDs liberate or quarantine?  The article touches on an important subject if niche dating websites segregate that particular section of society.  She has viewpoints on both sides of the argument; however I firmly stand by my feelings that niche websites allow for open communication between individuals without the fear of discrimination or backlash. 

Because PositiveFriends.com focuses on building support networks for all those affected by STDs, we allow for a more diverse population then your run-of-the-mill dating website.  With 1 in 3 Americans having an STD, chances are you or someone you know is dealing with this on a very personal basis.  How do you react when you find out?  How do you talk to those around you about it?  How do you stop your own bias from filtering into your attitude toward that person (or yourself!)

Overall I found this article to be a great way for people to at least start the dialogue that has been severely lacking in our society. 

Friday
01Feb2008

Sex::Tech Conference Wrap-up

sextec.jpgThe Sex::Tech conference that I spoke at on January 22nd was really fantastic.  There were some great people presenting, and it was interesting to see how other people are promoting safer sex and std awareness.  Here are some websites I came away being more interested in:

 MyStudentBody.com - A comprehensive website offering information about many things that affect health of college kids, including Alcohol, Nutrition, Stress, Tobacco, and STDs.

MidwestTeenSexShow - Really well done video podcast of teens talking frankly about issues that affect them.

SMS STD Health Q&A - This is something that I’ve been looking into having available for PositiveFriends.com members, and something the Orange County Planned Parenthood is doing successfully.   

 
You can also check out a copy of the PDF that I presented here:  Behavioral Patterns of Online Teenagers and How to Effectively Reach Them