Taffa Negussie, Bjune Gunnar, Sundby Johanne, Gaustad Peter, Alestrøm Anette
Department of International Health, Institute of General Practice and Community Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Sex Transm Dis. 2002 Dec;29(12):828-33. doi: 10.1097/00007435-200212000-00015.
No community-based study on the magnitude of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) has ever been conducted among young people in Ethiopia.
To assess the magnitude of Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae infections and status of sexual risk behavior among youths (15-24 years old) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Youths in or out of school residing in two (of the six) administrative zones in Addis Ababa served as the study population. Participants filled out a self-administered questionnaire related to sexuality and its sociocultural determinants. First-void urine (FVU) was analyzed for gonorrhea and chlamydial infection by polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
A total of 561 youths took part in the study. Urine PCR was performed for 522 of them. Nine subjects (1.7%) were found to have and N gonorrhoeae and C trachomatis infections. There were five cases (1.0%) involving each agent. Double infection was noted in one female subject. All but one of the infections were detected among the out-of-school youths (chi-square = 4.5; < 0.05). None of these subjects complained of symptoms suggestive of an active STD. One-third (188/561) reported having had sexual intercourse. The prevalence among sexually active youths was thus 4.8% (9/188) for both infections combined (2.7% for each agent). While 7/52 (13.5%) of the sexually active females were found to also have STDs, only 2/136 (1.5%) of the males had an STD (chi-square = 8.0; < 0.01). Report of sexual activity was significantly associated with being male, an age of >/=20 years, out-of-school status, and report of alcohol/khat (amphetamine-like substance) consumption. Females reported less condom use, whether they were in or out of school and independent of age.
Out-of-school youths, especially females, took more sexual risk and were exceedingly susceptible to STDs. This calls for alternative group-targeted strategies for sex education, disease prevention, and STD screening and management.
埃塞俄比亚从未针对年轻人开展过基于社区的性传播疾病(STD)规模研究。
评估埃塞俄比亚亚的斯亚贝巴15至24岁青少年沙眼衣原体和淋病奈瑟菌感染规模以及性风险行为状况。
居住在亚的斯亚贝巴六个行政区中两个行政区的在校或失学青少年作为研究对象。参与者填写一份关于性行为及其社会文化决定因素的自填式问卷。通过聚合酶链反应(PCR)对首次晨尿(FVU)进行淋病和衣原体感染分析。
共有561名青少年参与研究。其中522人进行了尿液PCR检测。9名受试者(1.7%)被发现感染淋病奈瑟菌和沙眼衣原体。每种病原体各有5例(1.0%)。一名女性受试者被发现双重感染。除1例感染外,其余均在失学青少年中检测到(卡方检验= = 4.5;P < 0.05)。这些受试者均无提示活动性STD的症状主诉。三分之一(188/561)的人报告有过性行为。因此,性活跃青少年中两种感染合并的患病率为4.8%(9/188)(每种病原体为2.7%)。性活跃女性中有7/52(13.5%)也被发现患有STD,而男性中只有2/136(1.5%)患有STD(卡方检验= 8.0;P < 0.01)。性行为报告与男性、年龄≥20岁且失学以及饮酒/嚼卡特叶(类苯丙胺物质)报告显著相关。女性报告的避孕套使用率较低,无论其在校与否且与年龄无关。
失学青少年,尤其是女性,承担更多性风险且极易感染STD。这需要针对不同群体采取替代性的性教育、疾病预防以及STD筛查和管理策略。