VOL. LIII, NO. 71
California State University, Long Beach Feburary 11, 2003
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. News  
 

Chlamydia, gonorrhea leading STIs on campus


By Cassady Jeremias

On-line Forty-Niner

The most common STI at Cal State Long Beach is chlamydia and gonorrhea is the second, according to Student Health Services.
 
In 2001, there were 1,804 women tested for chlamydia at the Health Services, according to Karen Taylor, lab supervisor at Student Health Services. There were 38 positives, a percentage of 2.1 percentage, roughly average for Los Angeles County.
 
Chlamydia is especially serious for women, said Larry Harvey, clinical coordinator of Student Health Services.
 
“Chlamydia is an infection that when left untreated can eventually cause sterility, and is serious because there are usually no symptoms,” Harvey said.
 
All women who come to the center for a Pap smear get tested for the bacterial infection, unless they sign a release, Harvey said. But Harvey sees the biggest problem with students getting tested is complacency.
 
“People see so many ads, art and discussions about STIs that at some point you just don’t hear it anymore,” he said.
 
“Gonorrhea and chlamydia cases are higher in the U.S. because they haven’t gotten much coverage. How many chlamydia awareness days have you heard of,” Wendy Nomura, human sexuality lecturer in health science, said.
 
Sexually active individuals are advised to be tested regularly, even if there are no symptoms. Diseases can be in the blood while showing no signs on the outside.
 
“They get extra credit in my class if they do it, but they don’t have to tell the results,” Nomura said.
 
A flurry of new birth control methods have come out recently, none of which prevent STIs except the female condom. The condom, according Harvey, is not too well received.
 
“It is cumbersome. The female must hold it in place at first or it will be dragged in. And the male cannot use a condom with it,” Harvey said.
 
It is made of latex, and must only be used with water based products to prevent damage to the condom while in use.
 
“This means no using whip cream, chocolate or anything oil based,” Harvey said.
 
Also new in birth control methods is the female hormone patch called Ortho Evra. It is the size of a book of matches and thinner than paper. According to Nomura, the biggest complaint about the patch is skin allergies.
 
Also new, the Nuva ring, which when inserted is good for up to one weeks worth of oral birth control methods. While these methods are not yet available at the health center on campus, they will be eventually.
 
Harvey said he wants to get the message across that the health center is there for everybody, no matter what kind of relationship they are in. The center provides prescription drugs at low prices and an array of birth control and STI prevention items including dental dams, a small square latex sheet that is used when giving oral sex to prevent the exchange of bodily fluids.
 
“We have a contract with the state and CSU’s so we can drive drug prices down so we can pass on savings to the students,” he said.
Even with condom use, and other methods of birth control, they must be used regularly and correctly for them to be effective.
 
“Condom use is going down between men who have sex with men because AIDS is now seen as a treatable disease. Not curable, but treatable, there is now some complacency,” Nomura said.
 
“But the biggest culprit is drugs and alcohol,” Harvey said. “Students don’t realize that the acts they do today really has a consequence down the road.”

 


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