
THE RETURN OF SYPHILIS
OKLAHOMA CITY — For months, health officials in this socially conservative state capital have been staggered by a fast-spreading outbreak of a disease that, for nearly two decades, was considered all but extinguished.
Syphilis,
the deadly sexually transmitted infection that can lead to blindness,
paralysis and dementia, is returning here and around the country,
another consequence of the heroin and methamphetamine epidemics, as
users trade sex for drugs.
To
locate possible patients and draw their blood for testing, Oklahoma’s
syphilis detectives have been knocking on doors in dilapidated
apartment complexes and dingy motels, driving down lonely rural roads
and interviewing prison inmates. Syphilis has led them to members of
17 gangs; to drug dealers; to prostitutes, pimps and johns; and to
their spouses and lovers, all caught in the disease’s undertow.
“Syphilis
doesn’t sleep for anyone,” said Portia King, a veteran Oklahoma
state health investigator.
“We have 200 open cases of sex partners we’re looking for. And
the spread is migrating out of the city.”
It
took months for investigators to realize Oklahoma City had a syphilis
outbreak. Last fall, the juvenile detention center reported three
cases — a boy and two girls, the youngest, 14. The center had never
had a syphilis case in seven years of testing for it.
Investigators
were mystified: The teenagers did not know each other, live in the
same neighborhood or attend the same school.
Then,
in February, a prison inmate tested positive. In interviews, he
listed 24 sex partners — some his own, others the so-called
pass-around girls for gangs, usually in exchange for heroin or
methamphetamine. Contact information from the Entertainment Manager,
as he called himself, pointed the way to a syphilis spread that, by
March, led health
officials to declare an outbreak,
one of the largest in the country.
Although
syphilis still mostly afflicts gay and bisexual men who are
African-American or Hispanic, in Oklahoma and nationwide, rates are
rising among white women and their infants.
Syphilis
is devilishly difficult to contain, but may be even more so now.
Because most doctors haven’t seen a case since the late 1990s, they
often misdiagnose it. The cumbersome two-step lab test is antiquated.
Although syphilis can be cured with an injection, there has been
a shortage
of the antibiotic,
made only by Pfizer, for over a year.
And
funding for clinics dedicated to preventing sexually transmitted
diseases is down. In 2012, half of state programs that address
sexually transmitted infections experienced reductions; funding has
largely stayed flat since then. The Trump administration has proposed
a 17 percent cut to the federal
prevention budget.
Nearly
24,000 cases of early-stage syphilis, when the disease is most
contagious, were reported in the United States in 2015, the most
recent data. That was a 19 percent rise over the previous year. The
total for 2015, including those with later-stage disease, was nearly
75,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/24/health/syphilis-std-united-states.html
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