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What
are Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs)?
Sexual activity often involves getting close to another
person. Being close allows infections present in one person to be
passed on to the other. You can’t be much closer to anyone
when you are sexually intimate, so it isn’t surprising if
germs get spread that way.
There are at
least 25 different STI’s. What they all have in common is
that they can be spread by sex. This means:
- Vaginal
intercourse (where the penis penetrates the vagina)
- Oral sex
(where partners kiss or stimulates each other’s genitals
with their tongues)
- Anal sex
(where the penis penetrates the anus)
WHY
ARE STI’s IMPORTANT?
What’s special about sexually transmitted infections
is that some of them can cause serious and permanent damage to your
health if left untreated. Some STI’s can make people unable
to have children, for instance, so it is important that all STI’s
are diagnosed by a health care provider and treated as soon as possible.
WHO
GETS STI’s ?
You don’t have to be ‘sleeping’
around to catch an STI, just about everyone who is having sex can
get an infection. Even if you and your partner have been ‘faithful’
to each other for a long time, it is possible that one of you might
suddenly discover an infection. This is because some infections
can lie dormant in the body and often don’t cause symptoms
for a long time. Just because one partner finds an infection doesn’t
have to mean that the other has been ‘unfaithful’.
Obviously though,
the more partners you have, the greater your chance that one of
them will pass on an infection to you.
HOW
DO YOU KNOW YOU MAY BE INFECTED?
If you are infected, you or your partner may develop
symptoms such as:
- unusual
vaginal discharge
- discharge
from the penis
- sore or blister
near vagina, penis or anus
- rash or irritation
around the vagina, penis or anus
- pain or burning
feeling on passing urine
- passing urine
more often than usual
- pain when
you have sexual intercourse
On the other
hand, you may have no symptoms at all. In this case you could know,
if your partner had an infection and told you about it.
Another way
to find out if you have an STI is to go to a clinic just for a check
up, even if you think you are OK.
WHAT
NEXT?
You need to see a health care provider if you think
you might have an infection, where expert help is available.
Remember
that clinics treat all information as EXTREMELY confidential. Unless
you give your permission no one has access to your records.
HOW
CAN YOU AVOID STI’s
There are several things you can do which, together,
help to make sex safer. If you want to avoid STI’s including
HIV, then you might find the following helpful:
- Get to know
your partners before you have sex. This lets you talk with each
other about how to protect yourselves.
- If either
of you has symptoms, including cold sores on your lips, don’t
have sex until after you have been treated.
- Get some
condoms and learn how to use them properly.
- Use condoms
with spermicide. The spermicide may help to kill the virus that
causes AIDS.
- Have routine
check ups from your health care provider.
- Tell your
partner if you have an infection. That way your partner can be
treated too, and won’t pass the infection back to you.
Sex is a normal
and healthy part of life but does need thought and preparation.
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