People who use the Internet to find real-life sex partners are more likely to have had sexually transmitted diseases or engaged in risky intimate behavior, a government-led study found.
Published:
27 July 2000 y., Thursday
Another study, based on San Francisco's handling of syphilis cases linked to an Internet chat room, suggests the Internet can help public health officials curb disease outbreaks.
Both studies appear in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
In the first study, led by Centers of Disease Control researcher Mary McFarlane, investigators looked at the habits of 856 clients at a Denver HIV testing and counseling center. Nearly 16 percent — 135 subjects — reported seeking sex partners online.
Nearly a third of those online seekers said they had contracted sexually transmitted diseases and had been exposed to HIV-positive sex partners. In comparison, 20 percent of those who tried to find partners in more conventional ways said they'd had venereal diseases and just 14 percent said they'd had HIV-positive partners.
A JAMA editorial said the findings weren't surprising, since the anonymity of sex facilitated by the Internet would be expected to appeal to "sexual adventurers" willing to take risks.
The San Francisco health officials determined last year that two men may have contracted syphilis from partners they met online. Because the patients said they knew only their partners' chat room aliases, officials couldn't use conventional methods of tracking them down or alerting others about the danger.
With help from the service provider that hosted the chat room, officials posted alerts there encouraging men who may have met sexual partners online to seek medical evaluation. That helped them find five additional men with syphilis linked to the chat room, said the authors, led by Dr. Jeffrey Klausner of the city's public health department.
Šaltinis:
discovery.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A regional court in the southern city of Krakow on Tuesday cleared the U.S. tobacco company Philip Morris and France's Seita of liability in causing lung cancer and the death of a Polish woman.
more »
Ecstasy, the amphetamine-like drug made popular by ``raves'' and other mass dancing events, can severely deplete levels of a brain chemical linked with mood, researchers said on Monday.
more »
Health: Drug doesn't fight the virus but prevents many opportunistic infections. Still, even its low cost poses problems for poor nations.
more »
On Tuesday, June 4th, over 200 representatives of the Russian scientific community gathered in the streets of major Russian cities to demonstrate against a bill to cut funding for scientific research.
more »
On Wednesday the "Kosmos-3M" light carrierrocket was launched from the "Plesetsk" cosmodrome.
more »
Canadian scientists found that one virus destroy cancer tumor cells. Maybe it is the beginning of anti-cancer medicine?
more »
In a major step toward a new era of gene-based medicine and disease treatment, two research centers are expected to announce on Monday that they separately have sketched a map detailing the secrets of human genetic structure.
more »
The specialists are sure that "large-scale influence of the chemical weapon on the environment of the Baltic sea is impossible".
more »
The scientists build the biggest botanical garden in the World, which will contain the plants from three climate zones. The project is called the Eden Project.
more »
Government and industry are to invest matching funds to develop optical Internet technology, Science Minister Lord Sainsbury said today.
more »