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Gays targeted for monitoring
14/8/2006 11:02

State authorities are considering a plan to monitor gay men and other high-risk groups for sexually transmitted diseases in an effort to control the spread of the AIDS virus.

The Ministry of Health is now soliciting opinions from local disease control and prevention centers on a national plan for monitoring STDs.

Under the plan, monitoring stations would survey the incidence of STDs among prostitutes, gays and long-distance drivers and test their knowledge about STDs.

The five sexually transmitted diseases to be checked are gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia trachomatis, human papillomavirus and genital herpes.

The number of sexually transmitted infections diagnosed in China is on the rise. There were 126,400 cases of syphilis in the country last year, an increase of 35.79 percent over 2004, and 180,300 cases of gonorrhea.

Homosexuality, while no longer officially branded a mental disorder, is still an off-limits subject for many people in China.

Chinese health authorities estimate there are 5 million to 10 million gay men in the country and about 80 percent of them admit they know nothing about the spread of HIV/AIDS, according to a survey conducted in 2004.

China reported 75,000 new HIV infections last year.

The monitoring plan requires local disease control centers to keep STD data confidential and report it only to the national center.

The provinces and regions with the highest incidence of STDs are Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Shanghai and Jiangxi.

The problem is becoming so severe that an increasing number of infants are being born with sexually transmitted infections, according to a report by China's Center for Disease Control and Prevention under the Ministry of Health.

Analysts say STDs are on the rise because China has a weak monitoring system that fails to report infections in a timely fashion.

 



 Xinhua news