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Oral-sex issue hits middle schools (posted 6/10/2002)
Lexington Herald Leader ^ | Jun. 09, 2002 | Valarie Honeycutt Spears

Posted on 06/10/2002 4:35:38 AM PDT by Pern

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To: Don Myers
Thanks for the link/info. Much appreciated.
441 posted on 06/11/2002 12:39:18 PM PDT by FreeTally
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To: Don Myers; JediGirl
Study participants were more likely to be infected with genital herpes not only if they were African American or female, but also if they had more than 20 lifetime sexual partners, had been sexually active for more than ten years, had a prior diagnosis of syphilis or gonorrhea, had less than a high school education, or were 25 years of age or older.

Something for JediGirl to consider.

442 posted on 06/11/2002 12:41:41 PM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: faintpraise
Wasn't it Jocelyn Elders who wrote the forward to that book that came out recently advocating adult/child sex? I wouldn't turn my kids over to Jocelyn Elders in a million years.
443 posted on 06/11/2002 12:44:08 PM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: yendu bwam
Here is something else for Jedigirl, and others who lead a hedonistic lifestyle now with the intent of maybe raising a family someday. Here are two relevent points for them to consider.

"Chlamydia is so common in young women that, by age 30, 50% of sexually active women have evidence that they have had chlamydia at some time during their lives."

"Chlamydia is known as a "silent" disease because three quarters of infected women and half of infected men have no symptoms. The infection is frequently not diagnosed or treated until complications develop."

"Because symptoms of chlamydia are mild or absent, serious complications that cause irreversible damage, including infertility, can occur "silently" before a woman ever recognizes a problem."

Here is the report from the CDC web site.

May 2001

Chlamydia Disease Information

What is chlamydia?

Chlamydia is a common sexually transmitted disease (STD) caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, a bacterium, which can damage a woman's reproductive organs. Because symptoms of chlamydia are mild or absent, serious complications that cause irreversible damage, including infertility, can occur "silently" before a woman ever recognizes a problem.

How do people get chlamydia?

Chlamydia can be transmitted during vaginal, anal, or oral sex. Chlamydia can also be passed from an infected mother to her newborn during vaginal childbirth.

How common is chlamydia?

Chlamydia is the most frequently reported bacterial sexually transmitted infection in the United States. More than 650,000 cases were reported in 1999, and three of every four reported cases occurred in persons under age 25. Under-reporting is substantial because most people with chlamydia are not aware of their infections and do not seek testing. An estimated 3 million Americans are infected with chlamydia each year. Chlamydia is so common in young women that, by age 30, 50% of sexually active women have evidence that they have had chlamydia at some time during their lives.

What are the symptoms of chlamydia?

Chlamydia is known as a "silent" disease because three quarters of infected women and half of infected men have no symptoms. The infection is frequently not diagnosed or treated until complications develop.

In women, the bacteria initially attack the cervix (opening to the uterus) and the urethra (urine canal). The few women with symptoms might have an abnormal vaginal discharge or a burning sensation when urinating. When the infection spreads from the cervix to the fallopian tubes, some women still have no signs or symptoms; others have lower abdominal pain, low back pain, nausea, fever, pain during intercourse, and bleeding between menstrual periods. Whenever the infection spreads past the cervix into the upper reproductive system, permanent and irreversible damage can occur.

Men with signs or symptoms might have a discharge from the penis and a burning sensation when urinating. Men might also have burning and itching around the opening of the penis or pain and swelling in the testicles, or both.

How soon after exposure do symptoms appear?

If symptoms do occur, they usually appear within 1 to 3 weeks of exposure.

How is chlamydia diagnosed?

There are two kinds of laboratory tests to diagnose chlamydia. One involves collecting a specimen from an infected site (cervix or penis) to detect the bacterium directly. Another test that is becoming widely available can accurately detect chlamydia bacteria in a urine sample. A Pap test is not a test for chlamydia; it is a test for abnormal cervical cells.

Who is at risk for chlamydia?

Sexually active men and women can be exposed to chlamydia bacteria during sexual contact with an infected person. The more sex partners a person has, the greater the risk of chlamydia infection. Babies are at risk of acquiring a chlamydial infection from their infected mother.

Sexually active teenagers and young women are especially susceptible to chlamydia bacteria because of the characteristics of the cells that form the lining of the cervical canal.

What is the treatment for chlamydia?

Chlamydia can be easily treated and cured with antibiotics. A single dose of azithromycin or a week of doxycycline (twice daily) are the most commonly used treatments. All sex partners must also be treated.

What complications can result from untreated chlamydia?

If untreated, chlamydia infection can progress to serious reproductive and other health problems with both short-term and long-term consequences. Like the disease itself, the damage that chlamydia causes is often "silent."

Untreated chlamydia in men typically causes urethral infection. Infection sometimes spreads to the epididymis (a tube that carries sperm from the testis), causing pain, fever, and, potentially, infertility.

In women, the chlamydia bacteria often infect the cells of the cervix. If not treated, the infection can spread into the uterus or fallopian tubes (egg canals) and cause an infection called pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). This happens in up to 40% of women with untreated chlamydia. PID can cause permanent damage to the fallopian tubes, uterus, and tissues surrounding the ovaries. This damage can lead to chronic pelvic pain, infertility, and potentially fatal ectopic pregnancy (pregnancy outside the uterus).

In pregnant women, there is some evidence that chlamydia infections can lead to premature delivery. Babies who are born when their mothers are infected can get chlamydial infections in their eyes and respiratory tracts. Chlamydia is a leading cause of early infant pneumonia and conjunctivitis (pinkeye) in newborns.

Compared to women who do not have chlamydia, women infected with chlamydia may also have higher risk of acquiring HIV infection from an infected partner. Chlamydia can cause proctitis (an infection of the lining of the rectum) in persons having receptive anal intercourse. The bacterium also can be found in the throats of women and men having oral sex with an infected male partner.

How can chlamydia be prevented?

Safe sexual behavior and seeking proper health care can help keep people from becoming infected or re-infected with chlamydia and from experiencing chlamydia complications.

Use condoms correctly every time you have sex.

Persons who engage in sexual behaviors that can place them at risk for STDs should use latex or polyurethane condoms every time they have sex. A condom put on the penis before starting sex and worn until the penis is withdrawn can help protect both the male and the female partner from chlamydia. When a male condom cannot be used appropriately, sex partners should consider using a female condom

Common methods of birth control, like the oral contraceptive pill or the contraceptive shot or implant, do not give women protection from STDs. Women who use these methods should also use condoms every time they have sex to prevent STDs.

Condoms do not provide complete protection from all STDs. Sores and lesions of other STDs on infected men and women may be present in areas not covered by the condom, resulting in transmission of infection to a new person.

Limit the number of sex partners, and do not go back and forth between partners.

Practice sexual abstinence, or limit sexual contact to one uninfected partner.

Get a screening test.

If you are young, sexually active, and do not use condoms correctly every time you have sex, you should be screened for chlamydia at least once a year. It has been shown that screening and treatment of women with chlamydia infection of the cervix reduces the likelihood of PID. All pregnant women should have a screening test for chlamydia.

If you think you are infected, avoid sexual contact, and see a health care provider immediately.

Any genital signs or symptoms such as discharge or burning during urination or an unusual sore or rash should be a signal to stop having sex and to consult a health care provider immediately.

If you are told you are infected, notify all your sex partners immediately.

If you are told you have chlamydia or any other STD and receive drug treatment, you should notify all of your recent sex partners so that they can see a health care provider and be treated. A sex partner needs treatment even if (s)he has no symptoms. This will reduce the risk that your partners will develop serious complications from chlamydia and reduce your risk of becoming re-infected. Do not have sex until both you and your sex partner complete your chlamydia drug treatment.

For more information

DSTD Web address www.cdc.gov/std/

CDC National STD Hotline

(800) 227-8922 or (800) 342-2437

En Espanol (800) 344-7432

TTY for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (800) 243-7889

National HPV and Cervical Cancer

Hotline (919) 361 - 4848

Resource Center www.ashastd.org/hpvccrc/

National Herpes Hotline

(919) 361-8488

CDC NPIN

P.O. Box 6003 Rockville, MD 20849-6003

1-800-458-5231 1-888-282-7681

Fax 1-800-243-7012 TTY

www.cdcnpin.org/

info@cdcnpin.org

American Social Health Association

P. O. Box 13827 Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-3827

1-800-783-9877

www.ashastd.org --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

References

American Social Health Association. Sexually

transmitted diseases in America: How many cases and at what

cost? Research Triangle Park, NC, 1998.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1998 Guidelines for Treatment of Sexually Transmitted Diseases. MMWR 1998;47(RR-1).

Division of STD Prevention. Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance, 1999. Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), September 2000.

Division of STD Prevention. Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance, 1998. Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), September 1999.

Stamm, W.E. In: K. Holmes, P. Mardh, P. Sparling et al (eds). Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 3rd edition. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1999, 407-422.

444 posted on 06/11/2002 12:55:50 PM PDT by Don Myers
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To: Don Myers
Many, many sexually active young women will be sterile by the time they want to have children. Sadly, female sterility is becoming a mini-epidemic. What's worth more? Sex now, or a child later?
445 posted on 06/11/2002 1:52:46 PM PDT by yendu bwam
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To: All
Thanks Everyone for the info on STD's. I was wondering why the states stopped testing for STD's when people wanted a Marriage licience. My wife and I were among the last tested when we got married (over 7 years ago), it seemed like a good idea???
446 posted on 06/11/2002 2:18:17 PM PDT by LowOiL
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To: Savage Beast
If you think Islamic nations are so moral....go explore a bit more closely. They hate us because we defend Israel and live freely, including religious freedom. They live die and seek sexual gratification from child prostitution, the abuse of their women ...etc.. same problems different culture, not as easy to see. Do your homework. As far as joining them...fly a plane into a building and receive Allahs blessings a multitude of virgins in heaven if your are a man.
447 posted on 06/11/2002 2:32:03 PM PDT by resistance
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To: yendu bwam
"What's worth more? Sex now, or a child later?"

To these girls, sex now. They will want the child later.

448 posted on 06/11/2002 2:45:58 PM PDT by Don Myers
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To: resistance
Blah blah blah blah! Yackity yack yack. See posts # 58 and 189, Sis. Maybe you like the teen-age blow-job scene. I don't.

However, as much as I hate to admit it--after you acted so nasty--it is true that the Muslims hate us because we're free--and they do live, die, and seek sexual gratification from child prostitution, the abuse of their women ...etc.--and they are not what one might call so moral.

And furthermore, slavery does exist in their theocracies--and they did dance in the streets after Sept. 11--and they do live in the dark ages--and they do believe in torturing and maiming people, chopping off hands and legs, stoning people to death--and so forth.

But somehow, I just can't get used to the teen-age blow-job scene. Can you?

449 posted on 06/11/2002 2:58:28 PM PDT by Savage Beast
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To: Don Myers
bump
450 posted on 06/11/2002 4:41:03 PM PDT by timestax
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To: Kevin Curry
Almost every Bible-belt Southern Baptist good-ol-boy beer drinking bass fisherman I've ever talked to has a lover on the side because his wife has a victorian propriety attitude about sex. And, they never do read Cosmopolitan.
451 posted on 06/11/2002 11:16:15 PM PDT by ThinkLikeWaterAndReeds
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To: headsonpikes
Those who had heads on spikes lived and practiced cannibalism (two subjects dear to your heart apparently) lived in New Guinea. You do know where that is? It has a cultural level which approximates yours so I presumed that was your home. How did Mike taste?
452 posted on 06/12/2002 7:05:52 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit
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To: justshutupandtakeit
Yo! Special Ed! Get your finger out of your nose and listen up.

First...it's 'pike', not 'spike'. A short investigation of that word would give you your first clue.

Second...the ritual display of heads by New Guinea cannibals is not unique. Indeed your own miserable ancestors no doubt practised it at some point in your genealogy.

Third...the use of the 'cannibal' metaphor in discussing the moral foundation of socialism in all its many guises is not malapropos. One has to wonder at your unstated agenda in attempting to divert attention from the crisis in the re-education camps.

453 posted on 06/12/2002 7:39:49 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: headsonpikes
Who would have thought that you could count. Let me know when you can get past 10.
454 posted on 06/12/2002 8:43:25 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit
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To: justshutupandtakeit
WOW!! What a snappy rejoinder!

Perhaps for a time, you should just shutupandlisten.

455 posted on 06/12/2002 8:50:46 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: headsonpikes
I listen very well to those with something to say however certifiable idiots who babble mindlessly will only get my ridicule. Sorry.
456 posted on 06/12/2002 9:26:46 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit
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To: justshutupandtakeit
LOLOL!!! Back to class now, Special Ed!
457 posted on 06/12/2002 9:50:19 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: headsonpikes
Though I am Special my name is not Ed.
458 posted on 06/12/2002 9:51:41 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit
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To: justshutupandtakeit
I know...but you are still special!

You just go with the nice lady now.

459 posted on 06/12/2002 9:57:31 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: headsonpikes
I always go with nice ladies. Too bad there isn't more of me to spread the joy.
460 posted on 06/12/2002 11:56:12 AM PDT by justshutupandtakeit
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