Disaster California STD Rates Skyrocketing

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The teenagers tucked their hands into their sweatshirt pockets as they shuffled to form a circle. Some gazed at the asphalt, trying to avoid the game they had been drafted to play.

“It’s like hot potato/musical chairs, but with a penis,” said the girl leading the group.

The kids gathered on a spring morning in South Los Angeles were about to get a hands-on lesson in sex education.

Many health experts say that public health problems are best tackled outside the doctor’s office — that fixing the culture that perpetuates them is more effective than changing a single patient’s behavior. For sexual health, that means combating the stigma around sex.

The teenagers, the girl explained, would pass a plastic, life-size penis around the circle. Whoever was holding it when the music stopped would have to unroll a condom onto it, completing each of the eight steps they had been taught a few minutes earlier.

The music started, and the teens looked up.

The recent all-day event, called Spring Into Love, was intended to get high schoolers more comfortable talking about sex. The hope is that an open dialogue will make them more likely to seek out condoms and STD testing, and eventually reduce the spread of disease.

The focus on stigma is just one of many ways Los Angeles County health officials are trying to think outside the box as they struggle to curb rising STD rates. It’s clear that the traditional ways of preventing disease — patients seeing a doctor regularly to get screened and treated — have not been working, said Dr. Jeffrey Gunzenhauser, L.A. County’s interim health officer.

“If that really happened, this problem could be taken care of,” he said.

The county recently created a Center for Health Equity to evaluate the way certain public health issues are intertwined with social factors such as income and education, as well as racial discrimination.

High STD rates are at the top of the center’s list of priorities. In just the past five years, the number of gonorrhea cases in Los Angeles County doubled, with minorities suffering more than most.

“The numbers are only going up,” Gunzenhauser said. “What’s going on is unacceptable.”

“All I heard was ‘Don’t get pregnant’”
The church auditorium was decked out in streamers and balloons. Kids chatted around tables with piles of Mardi Gras beads and condoms at the center.

Spring Into Love, which began five years ago, is the brainchild of a coalition of L.A. County health advocates trying to bring down STD rates. This year’s event, held in late March, included workshops on healthy relationships and body image, as well as free STD testing.

Ashley Deras, 18, showed a group of students how to safely open a condom wrapper. She said her family almost never talked to her about sex.

“Sexual health was something in my household that was taboo,” Deras, a high school senior, said in an interview. “All I heard was, ‘Don’t get pregnant.’”

Other teens at Spring Into Love sought practical information they hadn’t learned in health class. One boy said he hadn’t known he could get STDs from anal sex. Many said their parents would be mad at them for asking questions about sex at all.

“This is such a natural human interaction, and yet it’s so stigmatized,” said Valerie Coachman-Moore, who oversees WeCanStopSTDsLA, the coalition of advocates that put on the event. “People are having sex? Yeah.”

Many say the silence around sex plays a big role in young people’s high rates of STDs. Many feel uncomfortable walking into an STD clinic or talking to their partners about safe practices.

In L.A. County, half of chlamydia cases and a third of gonorrhea cases diagnosed each year are among people between the ages of 15 and 24.

“The one thing I never do, and I hope others don’t as well, is blame these young people for not taking care of themselves,” said Barbara Ferrer, head of L.A. County’s Department of Public Health.

Researchers increasingly view public health problems as shaped by the environments in which people live. Neighborhoods where people of color reside, for example, are more likely to be pollution-ridden and have fewer parks and doctors — factors that directly affect people’s health.

”This is not just their problem, it’s a community problem,” said Jim Rhyne of WeCanStopSTDsLA.

Is systemic racism to blame?
Los Angeles County launched a Center for Health Equity in October to address the idea that “health predominantly happens outside the health care setting,” said its director, Heather Jue Northover, at a recent meeting. “It happens where we live, work, play and pray.”

The center will target five health disparities, including high rates of STDs among certain minority groups.

Nationwide, STD rates have been climbing for the past five years. More people were diagnosed with syphilis, chlamydia or gonorrhea in 2016 than ever before.

Some blame underfunding of STD prevention programs, as well as falling condom usage. There’s also speculation that people are having sex with more partners because of hookup apps.

But the picture is more complicated when it comes to the high STD rates among minorities. Gay and bisexual men make up the vast majority of new syphilis cases. In L.A. County, syphilis rates among African American women are six times higher than white women and three times higher than Latina women.

Northover said that officials need to evaluate what’s called structural or systemic racism, the way housing or education policies may negatively impact people and their health. Studies have found, for example, that people with HIV who had low levels of literacy were less likely to follow their treatment, and that poorer Americans were more likely to engage in risky sexual behavior, increasing their risk of STDs.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a white paper in 2010 saying the country could not close disparities in STD rates without addressing “the interpersonal, network, community, and societal influences of disease transmission and health.”

But that’s a tall order given how entrenched many social problems are.

Poverty or a lack of opportunity may be forcing women to exchange sex for resources, leading to the spread of STDs, Northover said. There also tends to be a mistrust of the medical system among African Americans, making them reluctant to seek care. Certain neighborhoods may be excluded from access to healthcare because of geography or finances, she said.

“We need to take a wider lens,” said Northover, who added that she’s still trying to get to the bottom of what’s driving STD rates.

County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas, who represents South Los Angeles, convened several community groups in 2012 to try to bring down STD rates through collaboration. But the still-growing case numbers suggest the approach needs to be reimagined, said Dr. Michael Hochman, a senior health deputy for the supervisor.

“If you keep doing the same thing and expect a different result, then that’s insanity,” Hochman said.
 
Not surprising given California's make-up. Blacks and gays have much higher rates of STDs.

According to a study put out by the CDC in 2013, the reason was that these groups date in smaller social circles. In other words, gays fuck gays and black men tend to fuck the same women. The study concluded with stating that 70% of black, gay men in 2043 will have HIV.

In 2014, another CDC study stated that "There was an overall increase of 2.8% in chlamydia rates between 2013 and 2014; the rate among blacks is 6 times the rate of whites. After reaching a historic low in gonorrhea rates in 2009, the figures for 2014 grew quickly; the rate among blacks is 10.6 times that of whites. Syphilis rates jumped so much that they are now at their highest rate since 1994; the rate among blacks is 5.4 times the rate among whites.

Blacks comprise roughly 13% of the U.S. population, yet they account for 55.4% of all gonorrhea cases and 50.6% of all syphilis cases. Even more disturbing are the rates for chlamydia and gonorrhea among blacks in the 0-4 age group: no racial or ethnic group comes close to them."

In 2016, the CDC reported that "Fifty percent of black men who have sex with men will be diagnosed with HIV in their lifetime... African-Americans continue to be the most at-risk racial group — one in 20 men and one in 48 women will have HIV in their lifetime."

This reminds me of my favorite Jimmy Carr joke: "If we sent more mosquito nets to Africa, every year we could save millions of mosquitoes
from dying needlessly of AIDS."
 
Huh. You mean to tell me that knowingly passing on STDs stopped being labeled a felony in California, a state full of promiscuous people of all orientations, and the amount of infected persons skyrocketed? Well, color me surprised!
 
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Huh. You mean to tell me that knowingly passing on STDs stopped being labeled a felony in California, a state full of promiscuous people of all orientations, and the amount of infected persons skyrocketed? Well, color me surprised!

I bet they just did that just to see what would happen... and mostly shits and giggles.
 
of course it's racism...Not
will the day ever come, where minorities shall be be considered responsible for their own goddamn actions?
 
The single biggest breakthrough medical science ever made, that has saved more lives than anything else, is not antibiotics or any kind of medication. It's hand washing, and by extension germ theory. Europe and America were able to rid themselves- or at least come close to- of countless diseases not because of pills, but through a culture of cleanliness and precaution. It does not matter what kind of medication you have available, if you still shit in the streets, if you still refuse to filter your water, if you still share drinks and combs and have unprotected sex, if you don't change your behavior, you are not going to be successful at managing disease.

But personal responsibility, proper infrastructure, and education are too hard for certain parts of the world and for certain groups, so lets throw antibiotics at India so they can misuse them and breed resistant superbugs that live in the drinking water instead.
 
Racism must have been nonexistent back the 1920's, because no one had AIDS back then.

lol @ LA, a little taste of Brazilian social apartheid in the US.

They're in a burning restaurant, complaining to empty air about the lack of cottage cheese at the salad bar.
 
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The state with the biggest hard-on for sexual promiscuity is having problems with STDs, and they think it's because they aren't loose enough with the sex talk? There's the California mentality in a nutshell.
 
Huh. You mean to tell me that knowingly passing on STDs stopped being labeled a felony in California, a state full of promiscuous people of all orientations, and the amount of infected persons skyrocketed? Well, color me surprised!

What's worrying is that those numbers are from before that legislative change. Someone looked at those numbers and *still* thought it was a good idea to change the legislation.

HIV has been sold as "a manageable long term condition" for a long time now. Why is anyone surprised that people are no longer terrified of it?
 
The teenagers tucked their hands into their sweatshirt pockets as they shuffled to form a circle. Some gazed at the asphalt, trying to avoid the game they had been drafted to play.

“It’s like hot potato/musical chairs, but with a penis,” said the girl leading the group.

The kids gathered on a spring morning in South Los Angeles were about to get a hands-on lesson in sex education.

Many health experts say that public health problems are best tackled outside the doctor’s office — that fixing the culture that perpetuates them is more effective than changing a single patient’s behavior. For sexual health, that means combating the stigma around sex.

The teenagers, the girl explained, would pass a plastic, life-size penis around the circle. Whoever was holding it when the music stopped would have to unroll a condom onto it, completing each of the eight steps they had been taught a few minutes earlier.

The music started, and the teens looked up.
Jesus fucking christ. If I had to put a condom on a dildo as the loser in a game of Hot Potato in school I would’ve been horrified. This doesn’t de-stigmatize sex, it just humiliates the kids and associates condoms with looking stupid in front of your peers. I mean fuck, I have secondhand embarrassment just from reading the first sentence.
 
Who knew that a culture steeped in homophobia and conservative religious doctrine would turn out to have a poor education on sexual health?
 
What's worrying is that those numbers are from before that legislative change. Someone looked at those numbers and *still* thought it was a good idea to change the legislation.

HIV has been sold as "a manageable long term condition" for a long time now. Why is anyone surprised that people are no longer terrified of it?
I didn't know that part. I guess this just furthers why we should all be sick of California, despite all it has given us.

Who knew that a culture steeped in homophobia and conservative religious doctrine would turn out to have a poor education on sexual health?
Way to assume the US is just a handful of people who had power for a while (in just about every nation known to man for most of post BCE history), then began to struggle for relevancy in the West ever since the early 2000s. This thread was about just one state, not a region or nation. More specifically the urban parts of a state that ignores the people who own most of the land because they're not as plentiful as the people who populate the enormous cities. Blame the retarded yuppies who think they have it rough that vote in the idiots that don't address proper issues and the lawmakers themselves, not the nation.
 
By what metric have these people decided that STD prevention and education should be taken out of the pediatrician's office?

You know the people who have access to the child's medical history, and can actually have private conversations with them regarding the subject that won't devolve into a circus freak show.

It's almost like they're more interested in being seen doing something.

Besides, for all the hullabaloo about sex ed they always neglect the hygiene part. How is a kid suppose to raise their hand and ask about UTIs in class full of their immature as fuck peers? Or even know what that is since everyone is too busy showing him/her how to wear condoms instead of identifying the signs and symptoms of disease.
 
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