Some STI rates have been reduced with, for instance, antiretrovirals for HIV/AIDS and the HPV vaccine. But there’s still ground to cover, and new patient groups to protect. Nearly half of all new infections in 2018 were in young people aged 15 to 24 years. Not only is it another dangerous trend, it is an expensive one. Chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis combined accounted for $1.1 billion in direct medical costs in 2018, the CDC report says, and care for young people aged 15 to 24 made up about 60% of those costs.
“Low or decreasing rates of condom use among vulnerable groups, including young people and gay and bisexual men, play important roles in driving ongoing STI rates,” Aronoff says. In part, that’s due to lack of comprehensive sex education, a lack that’s taking a huge toll.
“Remember now, we basically cut out a lot of the sex education. It doesn’t exist,” says Dr. Collins-Ogle. She has run clinics for several decades, and says she continually sees young male patients who don’t know how to use a condom. We know more now, though, she points out. “Back in the ‘80s, we didn’t have a direct correlation between STIs and AIDS. Now we know that having syphilis, for example, predisposes you to HIV acquisition. We also know that having HSV2, for example, predisposes you to HIV.”
It’s an ongoing battle, though, with each new generation of pathogens—and people. And as the CDC report shows, it’s like fighting a Hydra: When one infection is wrestled to the ground, another rears its head. There’s no time to rest on laurels. “Having highly contagious infections caused by difficult or impossible-to-treat microbes,” says David Aronoff, “is not a future I would wish on anyone