Department of Pediatrics, Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA.
Committee on Prevention and Control of Sexually Transmitted Infections in the United States, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Washington, DC 20001, USA.
Mil Med. 2022 May 3;187(5-6):140-143. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usab407.
To address the ongoing epidemic of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the United States, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (National Academies) conducted a consensus study on STI control and prevention in the United States to provide recommendations to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Association of County and City Health Officials. The culminating report identified military personnel as one of the priority groups that require special consideration given the high prevalence of STIs and their associated behaviors (e.g., concurrent sexual partners and infrequent condom use) that occur during active duty service. Universal health care access, the relative ease and frequency of STI screening, and the educational opportunities within the military are all assets in STI control and prevention. The report offers a comprehensive framework on multiple and interrelated influences on STI risk, prevention, health care access, delivery, and treatment. It also provides an overview of the multilevel risk and protective factors associated with STIs that could be applied using a sexual health paradigm. The military context must integrate the multilevel domains of influences to guide the effort to fill current gaps and research needs. The Department of Defense, with its large clinical and preventive medicine workforce and its well-established universal health care system, is well positioned to enact changes to shift its current approach to STI prevention, treatment, and control. STI control based on highlighting behavioral, social, cultural, and environmental influences on service members' sexual health and wellness may well drive better STI care and prevention outcomes.
为了解决美国当前性传播感染(STI)的流行问题,美国国家科学院、工程院和医学院(国家科学院)就美国 STI 控制和预防问题进行了一项共识研究,为疾病控制与预防中心和国家县和城市卫生官员协会提供了建议。总结报告确定军人是需要特别考虑的优先群体之一,因为他们在现役期间存在 STI 高发率及其相关行为(例如,同时性伴侣和不频繁使用避孕套)。全民医疗保健的可及性、STI 筛查的相对容易和频繁程度,以及军队内部的教育机会,都是 STI 控制和预防的优势。该报告提供了一个关于 STI 风险、预防、医疗保健可及性、提供和治疗的多个相互关联影响的综合框架。它还概述了与 STIs 相关的多层次风险和保护因素,可以使用性健康范例来应用。军事背景必须整合多层次的影响领域,以指导努力填补当前的差距和研究需求。国防部拥有庞大的临床和预防医学劳动力以及成熟的全民医疗保健系统,非常适合实施变革,转变其当前的 STI 预防、治疗和控制方法。基于强调对军人性行为健康和健康的行为、社会、文化和环境影响的 STI 控制,可能会带来更好的 STI 护理和预防结果。