Explaining Medicine
  • News
  • Health & Lifestyle
    • Diet & Weight Management
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Nutrition, Food & Recipes
    • Prevention & Wellness
  • Conditions
    • Custom1
      • Conditions A-Z
      • Procedures A-Z
      • Allergies
      • Alzheimer’s
      • Arthritis
      • Asthma
      • Blood Pressure
      • Cholesterol
      • Cancer
    • Custom2
      • Chronic Pain
      • Cold Flu
      • Depression
      • Diabetes
      • Digestion
      • Eyesight
      • Health Living
      • Healthy Kids
      • Hearing Ear
    • Custom3
      • Heart
      • HIV/AIDS
      • Infectious Disease
      • Lung Conditions
      • Menopause
      • Men’s Health
      • Mental Health
      • Migraine
      • Neurology
    • Custom4
      • Oral Health
      • Pregnancy
      • Senior Health
      • Sexual Health
      • Skin Problems
      • Sleep
      • Thyroid
      • Travel Health
      • Women’s Health
  • Medications
    • Medications
    • Supplements and Vitamins
  • Medical Dictionary
  • Health Alerts
Is It Dry Skin or Atopic Dermatitis?
Atopic Dermatitis: How to Get Enough Sleep
Atopic Dermatitis: Help for Broken Skin
Atopic Dermatitis and Food Triggers
What’s at stake as the Supreme Court hears...
Oncologists’ meetings with drug reps don’t help cancer...
Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria: What to Know
CSU: What to Wear and What to Avoid
Treatment Plan for Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria
When the Hives of CSU Don’t Go Away...
Top Posts

Explaining Medicine

  • News
  • Health & Lifestyle
    • Diet & Weight Management
    • Exercise & Fitness
    • Nutrition, Food & Recipes
    • Prevention & Wellness
  • Conditions
    • Custom1
      • Conditions A-Z
      • Procedures A-Z
      • Allergies
      • Alzheimer’s
      • Arthritis
      • Asthma
      • Blood Pressure
      • Cholesterol
      • Cancer
    • Custom2
      • Chronic Pain
      • Cold Flu
      • Depression
      • Diabetes
      • Digestion
      • Eyesight
      • Health Living
      • Healthy Kids
      • Hearing Ear
    • Custom3
      • Heart
      • HIV/AIDS
      • Infectious Disease
      • Lung Conditions
      • Menopause
      • Men’s Health
      • Mental Health
      • Migraine
      • Neurology
    • Custom4
      • Oral Health
      • Pregnancy
      • Senior Health
      • Sexual Health
      • Skin Problems
      • Sleep
      • Thyroid
      • Travel Health
      • Women’s Health
  • Medications
    • Medications
    • Supplements and Vitamins
  • Medical Dictionary
  • Health Alerts
  • News

    Discreetly Tracking Down Sex Partners To Stop A Surge In STDs

    by Kristian Foden-Vencil September 8, 2018

    Enlarge this image

    Mary Horman (left), a registered nurse for Clackamas County, and Liz Baca, a disease intervention specialist for the county, search for the right address in an Oregon neighborhood. Part of their job is to get information to people who may have a serious, treatable infection, yet not realize it. Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB hide caption

    toggle caption

    Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB

    Mary Horman (left), a registered nurse for Clackamas County, and Liz Baca, a disease intervention specialist for the county, search for the right address in an Oregon neighborhood. Part of their job is to get information to people who may have a serious, treatable infection, yet not realize it.

    Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB

    The U.S. is in the middle of a steep and sustained increase in sexually transmitted diseases.

    So how are public health officials responding?

    In northwest Oregon’s Clackamas County, health officials have decided to ask anyone who comes in with an STD who their sexual partners are — and then track those partners down.

    That job falls to two women: registered nurse Mary Horman, and disease intervention specialist Liz Baca. They do most of the work over the phone, telling people they’ve had a partner (no name is revealed) who has tested positive for gonorrhea, HIV, chlamydia or syphilis.

    It’s a difficult conversation. And many people can’t be reached via phone. So about once a week, Horman and Baca jump into a car and start knocking on doors.

    “It can definitely be scary at times,” Baca says, “especially those rural areas where you’re really relying on the GPS to get you there, and sometimes there are roads that lead you to nowhere.” So far, they haven’t gotten lost.

    Plenty of residents in the county’s outskirts own firearms, Baca says, and are comfortable displaying them if they feel they need to protect their property.

    “I always try to make myself visible and not be fidgety,” she says. Baca tries to make her approach as warm as possible, and says, ” ‘I have a nurse with me.’ Or, ‘My name is Liz, and I work for Clackamas County.’ “

    The two always travel as a pair, and never enter a home, she says. And they always carry a cell phone to keep the home office informed of their whereabouts.

    On the afternoon I catch up with them, Horman and Baca already have been challenged by a dog and had to leave a trailer park empty-handed. They had the right spot, but didn’t know which door to knock on. And they couldn’t just ask around, because neighbors might guess why the health department is tracking someone down, and that would be a breach of medical privacy.

    They next call on a 64-year-old laborer, who we’re just identifying as Larry for those same privacy reasons. He agrees to talk with them, in hopes of warning other people about the substantial risks of syphilis.

    Baca and Horman tell him how some diseases, like syphilis, are ” reportable” — meaning that as soon as Larry was diagnosed, the doctor had to inform the county, which is why they’re at his door.

    Larry tells them he’s already had penicillin delivered intravenously, and he’s healing fine.

    The conversation gets tougher as Baca tries to understand the extent of Larry’s infection by showing him graphic pictures of sores and rashes.

    “So, another symptom of secondary syphilis is the loss of hair,” she explains. “So, you suddenly lose some hair. You’re thinking, ‘What’s going on?’ In a couple of weeks it resolves. And you’re still infected. So do you recall any of these symptoms?”

    “I do,” Larry smiles. “And I would probably say that the lesion, I think you called it, I think occurred — it was probably about 10 years ago.”

    That means Larry was living with syphilis for at least a decade — without knowing it.

    Many people have syphilis are asymptomatic — meaning they are carriers of the bacteria, but show no obvious symptoms. And that makes the infection tougher to fight.

    Enlarge this image

    Clackamas County nurse, Mary Horman, explains to an Oregon man the physical problems that come with long-term syphilis infection. Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB hide caption

    toggle caption

    Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB

    Clackamas County nurse, Mary Horman, explains to an Oregon man the physical problems that come with long-term syphilis infection.

    Kristian Foden-Vencil/OPB

    Also, the fact that the disease was, for a time, nearly eradicated in much of the United States, means some younger doctors don’t readily recognize the symptoms and signs.

    Larry explains that he used to have sex with multiple partners he found on Craigslist. But he can’t remember any names.

    Baca is crestfallen. After such a long time, it’s too late to track down those people.

    Still, she insists her time wasn’t wasted.

    “Being out in the field, you find individuals and you get that public health intervention that is crucial,” she says.

    David Harvey, the executive director of the National Coalition of STD Directors, agrees that the efforts of fieldworkers like Baca and Horman are vital.

    “Disease intervention specialists are doing heroic work,” he says. “They’re helping to navigate and get people into care.”

    Twenty years ago, Harvey says, there were as many as 4,000 disease intervention specialists like Baca in the U.S. Now, because of public health costs, the number is down to about 1,400.

    Baca says she’ll continue the work, prioritizing high risk populations — like men who have sex with men and pregnant women.

    The public health officer for Clackamas County, Dr. Sarah Present, says syphilis in newborns can cause serious neurological complications and even death.

    “We have now multiple cases of congenital syphilis in our county — just in this year,” Present points out, “whereas that had been fairly unheard of for at least the last decade, if not more.”

    Partly because of that surge in syphilis among babies, Clackamas is now dedicating more resources to aggressively tracking down partners and encouraging testing, Present says — even if those notifications might lead to family strife.

    “We do our absolute best to have the [first person diagnosed] talk to their partners for us,” says Present. “We don’t want to have to be the bad guys. However, we can be a partner for people who have the infections — and help them figure out the best way to control the spread of the disease further.”

    A study released by Clackamas County earlier this summer shows rates of syphilis have increased 1300 percent over eight years — in part because the numbers involved used to be so small.

    “Within the last year we have seen our numbers dramatically increase to the point I’m quite concerned about it,” Present says.

    And Clackamas is no outlier. A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds that over the last several years, the number of gonorrhea cases has increased 67 percent, and syphilis cases are up 76 percent.

    The director of the CDC’s national center for STDs, Dr. Jonathan Mermin, says the nation is sliding backward.

    “It is evident the systems that identify, treat, and ultimately prevent STDs are strained to the near-breaking point,” he says.

    Scientists say there are many reasons for the national increase — from the rise in antibiotic-resistant bacteria, to the ease of finding anonymous sex in an era of cellphone hook-up apps.

    Public health departments in the United States have substantial powers. In their effort to prevent the spread of disease, they are allowed to inspect, treat and quarantine anyone — even without consent.

    That power originates in English common law, which finds the rights of an individual can be limited for the common good.

    The most famous example is perhaps the Long Island cook, Mary Mallon, better known as Typhoid Mary. She was an asymptomatic carrier — and transmitter — of typhoid in the early 1900s, and was forcibly isolated for years by New York public health officials.

    Nobody’s advocating such draconian measures now, especially for sexually transmitted diseases.

    But public health departments can exercise significant power over certain infectious diseases (such as drug-resistant tuberculosis) that are more broadly contagious because they are airborne.

    Clackamas County and the two other counties that make up the Portland metro area, have received substantial state and federal grants to help pay for its extra public health outreach.

    They are taking several steps to stop the transmission of STDs — like strengthening prevention activities, enhancing screening, testing high-risk populations and educating the public. The counties are also trying to better support people who test positive; expand investigations; and unite community leaders on this important issue.

    As Baca and Harmon visit with Larry on his front porch, the man thinks back to when he first realized he was very sick. Once he found out why his health was failing, he says, he started to take the infection seriously. “Because, really truly, for me,” he says, “it was going to be a matter of life and death.”

    Baca and Horman say getting the chance to save lives is why they do this work, even if it’s uncomfortable sometimes.

    A few minutes later, the women climb back into the car they’d left parked in a spot where getting away would be easy — just in case Larry wasn’t so accommodating. They check their map and the next name on their list.

    “There are those areas where you’re entering a property and there’s no one in sight,” Baca says, “and dogs can be scary. You have to run very fast if you see them.”

    This story is part of NPR’s reporting partnership with Oregon Public Broadcasting and Kaiser Health News, which is an independent journalism organization and not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

    Read the article here

    Share this Post

    Share Explaining Medicine Share Explaining Medicine

    Discreetly Tracking Down Sex Partners To Stop A Surge In STDs was last modified: September 17th, 2018 by Kristian Foden-Vencil

    Related

    chlamydiaGonorrheaHIVsexually transmitted diseasesSTDsyphilis
    0 comment
    0
    Facebook Twitter Google + Pinterest
    Kristian Foden-Vencil

    previous post
    Blacks’ Rate of Blood Pressure Crises 5X Higher
    next post
    Dr. Google and the IVF patient

    Related Articles

    If High Court Reverses Roe v. Wade, 22 States Likely To Ban Abortion

    July 10, 2018

    Racist Med School Yearbook Photos? Medicine’s Racism Problems Go Even Deeper

    February 12, 2019

    Minding Your Metabolism

    July 2, 2016

    Sexual Relationships When You’re HIV-Positive

    December 27, 2016

    Epipen Shortages Due To Production Problems: FDA

    May 9, 2018

    Red Tape May Delay Cancer Patients’ Radiation

    May 2, 2019

    In North Carolina, more people are training to support patients through an abortion

    December 19, 2022

    Kitchen Towels Laden With Bacteria

    June 12, 2018

    Adult Siblings Can Make Our Lives Healthier And Happier

    November 23, 2017

    Can You Play ‘Catch-Up’ and Be Healthy?

    January 9, 2017

    Recent Posts

    • Is It Dry Skin or Atopic Dermatitis?

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: How to Get Enough Sleep

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: Help for Broken Skin

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis and Food Triggers

      April 24, 2024
    • What’s at stake as the Supreme Court hears Idaho case about abortion in emergencies

      April 23, 2024

    Keep in touch

    Facebook Twitter Google + RSS

    Recent Posts

    • Is It Dry Skin or Atopic Dermatitis?

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: How to Get Enough Sleep

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis: Help for Broken Skin

      April 24, 2024
    • Atopic Dermatitis and Food Triggers

      April 24, 2024
    • What’s at stake as the Supreme Court hears Idaho case about abortion in emergencies

      April 23, 2024
    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy

    @2025 - Explaining Medicine. All Right Reserved.


    Back To Top
    Explaining Medicine
    Proudly powered by WordPress Theme: soledad child.