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NEWS
One
in 4 girls have sexually transmitted diseases, New York Times, 17 March
2008
March 17, 2008 NYTimes Editorial One in Four Girls
Teenage girls and their parents need to read the
latest government study of sexually transmitted diseases. The infections
are so prevalent they are hard to avoid once a girl becomes sexually
active. One in four girls ages 14 to 19 is infected with at least one of
four common diseases. Among African-American girls in the study, almost
half were infected.
The data, drawn from a sample of 838 girls who participated in a broad
national survey in 2003-4, was presented last week by researchers from
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. By far the most common
of the four S.T.D.’s was the human papillomavirus, or HPV, which
infected 18 percent of the girls. Chlamydia infected 4 percent,
trichomoniasis — a common parasite — 2.5 percent, and genital herpes 2
percent.
The study did not look at such feared diseases as H.I.V./AIDS, syphilis
or gonorrhea, but the four it did look at are worrisome enough. Although
most HPV infections cause no symptoms and clear the body in less than a
year, persistent HPV can cause cervical cancer and genital warts.
S.T.D.’s can cause infertility, pelvic inflammatory disease and other
painful symptoms.
It will not be easy for sexually active teenagers to avoid any danger.
Even among girls who said they had had only a single sexual partner, 20
percent were infected. With more than three million teenage girls
infected, it is imperative to find ways to protect others.
The new findings strengthen the case for providing HPV vaccine to young
girls and for regular screening of sexually active girls to detect
infection. There is also a clear need to strengthen programs in sex
education. Exhortations to practice abstinence go only so far.
Teenage girls who are sexually active need access to contraceptives and
counseling. They need to understand that the numbers are against them
and that a serious infection is but a careless sexual encounter away.
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