Sexual Health Flashcards

1
Q

What are the most common STIs in general practice?

A
  1. Chlamydia
  2. Gonorrhoea
  3. Hepatitis B
  4. Syphilis
  5. HIV
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2
Q

Epidemiology of chlamydia

A

> 80% occurs in people <29y
up to 75% are asymptomatic
Rates are higher in ATSI and MSM

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3
Q

What is the approximate risk of infection with STI in asymptomatic sexually active patients <29y

A

5% for chlamydia

0.5% for gonorrhoea

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4
Q

Burden of chlamydia infections

A

Women with untreated chlamydia have a 2-8% risk of infertility (annual screening of women <25 halves this rate)

Untreated pregnant women with chlamydia have a 20-50% chance of infecting their infant at delivery

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5
Q

Important information to gauge from a sexual history

A
Demographic features
Recent sexual activity
Gender and number of partners
Contraception and barrier methods
Travel history
Immunisation status (hep A and B)
Other risk factors for blood-borne infections
Pre-existing medical conditions, esp other STIs
Known sexual contact with an STI
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6
Q

Low -average risk of STI group and screening recommendations

A

Heterosexual, non-ATSI asymptomatic patients 20-29y living in metropolitan location

Urine, cervical or genital PCR for chlamydia
Confirm HBV immune status
Consider other infections based on risk assessment
Opportunistic screening - aim for annual

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7
Q

Medium-high risk of STI group and recommendations for screening

A

<20y age
Living in rural or remote location

Urine, cervical or genital chlamydia PCR
Confirm HBV immune status
Consider other infections based on risk assessment
Opportunistic screening as indicated - aim for annual

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8
Q

Who is considered higher risk for STIs and what is recommended screening

A

ATSI people
People who inject drugs
Sex workers

Test for chlamydia and gonorrhoea
Serology for HIV, syphilis and Hepatitis A and B (if not immune)
Hep C serology if IVDU

Offer Hepatitis A/Ba vaccine if not immune

Recommend every 12 months

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9
Q

Who is considered highest risk for STIs and recommended screening

A
Asymptomatic MSM
Higher still if:
- unprotected anal sex
- >10 partners in past 6 months
- Participate in group sex
- use recreational drugs during sex
- HIV positive

Urine, throat and rectal swabs for chlamydia and gonorrhoea
Serology for HIV, syphilis and Hepatitis A/B
Offer hepatitis A and B vaccination if not immune
Every 12 months unless in higher risk category, then up to every 3months

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10
Q

Management sexual contacts of known STI

A

Test and treat presumptively while awaiting results for gonorrhoea and chlamydia +/- other screening based on individual risk

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11
Q

Screening of syphilis in pregnancy

A

At booking
Those at high risk: repeat at 28 weeks and at delivery

During outbreak e.g. ATSI women from high risk area or women with ATSI partners from high risk area: booking, 28/40, 36/40, ,at delivery and 6 weeks postnatal

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12
Q

How to test for chlamydia

A

Men: FPU NAAT
MSM: +/- throat and ano-rectal NAAT

Women:

  • endocervical NAAT
  • self-collected NAAT swab
  • FPU NAAT
  • Ano-rectal NAAT if symptomatic or history of anal sex (can be self-collected)
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13
Q

How to test for gonorrhoea

A

Males (Non-MSM): FPU NAAT, urethral culture + NAAT if symptomatic

MSM: FPU NAAT
Urethral + throat +/- anorectal NAAT and culture even if asymptomatic

Females:
Endocervical NAAT + culture if symptomatic, self-collected NAAT +/- culture, FPU NAAT. Throat +/- anorectal NAAT/culture if history of oral/anal sex respectively

MCS is required for antibiotic susceptibility, culture is much less sensitive than NAAT at non-genital sites - if not already collected, culture samples should be obtained at time of treatment

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14
Q

Anonymous contact tracing online:

A

www. letthemknow.org.au
www. thedramaownunder.info (MSM)
www. bettertoknow.org.au (ATSI)

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