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6.
Artículo en Ruso | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39003559

RESUMEN

It is accepted to explain increasing of venereal diseases during years of the Revolution by degradation of morality and general disorder of system of state administration and sanitary services in Russia. The cross-verification of information presented in scientific publications and primary information sources makes it possible to look into following issues: degree of venereal (syphilitic) contamination of population of pre-revolutionary Russia; influence on sanitary statistics by erroneous diagnostics and convictions of Zemstvo medicine about predominantly non-sexual path of transmission of syphilis pathogen in Russian countryside; dynamics and sources of venereal morbidity in wartime. The high indicators of pre-revolutionary statistics of venereal infections could be affected by diagnostic errors. The "village syphilis" encountered in public milieu could be completely different disease not sexually transmitted and not chronic form of disease. The primary documents allow to discuss increasing of the number of venereal patients during war years, that however, does not reach catastrophic numbers that can be found even in scientific publications. This is also confirmed by data of Chief Military Sanitary Board of the Red Army for 1920s and statistical materials of People's Commissariat of Health Care of the RSFSR. The high morbidity was demonstrated by same Gubernias that were problematic before the Revolution and only later by those ones through which during the war years passed army masses. In Russia, total level of syphilis morbidity after the end of Civil War occurred to be more than twice lower than in pre-war 1913 and continued to decrease under impact of sanitary measures of Soviet public health.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual , Sífilis , Humanos , Historia del Siglo XX , Federación de Rusia/epidemiología , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/epidemiología , Sífilis/historia , Sífilis/epidemiología , Morbilidad/tendencias
8.
Bull Hist Med ; 96(2): 211-236, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35912619

RESUMEN

This article explores attempts to control outbreaks of venereal diseases among prostitutes and imperial soldiers in Cairo and Alexandria leading up to and through World War I. Seeking to move beyond the usual colonial framing of center-periphery, it considers two British imperial outposts-Egypt and Australia-in conversation. The war brought thousands of Australian soldiers to Egypt, leaving their mark on Egypt and becoming marked by their time there, sometimes in indelible and deadly ways, as bodies and bodily fluids collided, and microbes passed between colonial and imperial subjects. The article argues that the highly racialized and classed system for regulating foreign and local prostitution that British officials implemented in Egypt to protect soldiers exacerbated rather than contained the spread of venereal diseases.


Asunto(s)
Colonialismo , Personal Militar , Trabajadores Sexuales , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual , Australia , Egipto/epidemiología , Inglaterra , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/epidemiología , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia
9.
Urologe A ; 60(2): 226-233, 2021 Feb.
Artículo en Alemán | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30895335

RESUMEN

In the late 17th and early 18th centuries, ancient humoral pathology was gradually complemented by new concepts of medical theory. Two important theories that emerged in this context were iatrochemistry and iatrophysics. The physician Johannes Franc (1649-1725) from Ulm and Friedrich Hoffmann (1660-1742), the first professor of the medical faculty of the Fridericiana in Halle (Saale), are representatives of these concepts. In their writings, they conveyed specific instructions for broader therapeutic treatment including various forms of medication. The iatrochemist Franc recorded his therapies in his medical diary. The treatment methods of the iatrophysicist Hoffmann are written down in his twelve-volume Medicina consultatoria. Using the examples of gonorrhea and syphilis, the goal of this paper is to analyze, on the basis of both records, how the two physicians applied the new medical theoretical concepts in the treatment of these diseases. Franc and Hoffmann held the view that these two venereal diseases represent two separate entities. Thus both physicians departed from the traditional theory that gonorrhea was a stage of syphilis. Accordingly, they used different medication therapies for these diseases. Franc and Hoffmann referred to humoral pathological ideas, the discrasia of the humors in expounding the causes of the diseases. The same applies to their basic therapeutic approaches: they implemented humoral pathological concepts in their therapeutic practice. Bloodletting, sweating cures, and water cures as well as strict diets were prescribed. Nevertheless, differences in their treatment methods are clear. Franc consistently supplemented humoral pathology with ideas of iatrochemistry, prescribing treatment of gonorrhea and syphilis with mercury. Hoffmann, on the other hand, explicitly warned against treating gonorrhea with mercury; however, he was not fundamentally opposed to the use of drugs for the treatment of syphilis.


Asunto(s)
Gonorrea , Mercurio , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual , Smilax , Sífilis , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Humanos , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/tratamiento farmacológico , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Sífilis/tratamiento farmacológico
10.
Clin Dermatol ; 38(5): 598-603, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33280810

RESUMEN

Shortly after syphilis appeared in Europe at the time of Columbus' voyage to the New World, the big pox, as it was often known, became a serious issue in Russia for diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. Members of the Russian royal family were made aware of the disease from adolescence onward. Czar Peter the Great had many sexual contacts and could have contracted any number of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) that were quite common in his era. Nevertheless, contributions analyzed from available sources by his contemporary doctors, and later from medical analyses, reveal no evidence that he had contracted syphilis or any other STD. Most likely, he died from acute renal failure due to urinary tract obstruction.


Asunto(s)
Personajes , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Lesión Renal Aguda/etiología , Balneología/historia , Causas de Muerte , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Humanos , Masculino , Rusia (pre-1917) , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/transmisión , Sífilis , Obstrucción Ureteral/complicaciones
11.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 37(2): 319-359, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32822549

RESUMEN

Hypochondriac or phobic reactions to venereal disease, specifically syphilis, have invited over three centuries of medical reification and nosological reframing. This bibliographic overview establishes that the early specification and psychiatricization of early modern concepts of melancholy and hypochondriasis, imaginary syphilis or syphilophobia, animated the early respective territorializations of venereology, infectiology more broadly, neurology, and mental medicine. Together with mercuriophobia and a wider emergent clinical sensitivity to sexual angst, the diagnosis, while evidently only sporadically made, functioned as a durable soundboard in the confrontation of emergent medical rationale with various confounders and contenders: medically literate and increasingly mobile but possibly deluded patients; charlatans and putative malpractitioners; self-referral laboratory serology (after 1906); and eventually, through psychoanalysis, the patient's unconscious. Requiring medical psychology early on, syphilology became and remained self-conscious and circumspect, attentive to the casualties of overdiagnosis, overtreatment, and iatrogenesis. Finally, patient apprehension led to makeshift forms of "moral treatment," including fear-instilling and placebos.


Asunto(s)
Hipocondriasis/historia , Trastornos Fóbicos/historia , Sífilis/historia , Historiografía , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Trastornos Fóbicos/terapia , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/psicología , Sífilis/psicología
12.
Emerg Infect Dis ; 25(11): 2154-2156, 2019 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31625857

RESUMEN

We estimated the availability of the injectable antimicrobial drugs recommended for point-of-care treatment of gonorrhea and syphilis among US physicians who evaluated patients with sexually transmitted infections in 2016. Most physicians did not have these drugs available on-site. Further research is needed to determine the reasons for the unavailability of these drugs.


Asunto(s)
Antiinfecciosos/administración & dosificación , Gonorrea/tratamiento farmacológico , Gonorrea/epidemiología , Accesibilidad a los Servicios de Salud , Sífilis/tratamiento farmacológico , Sífilis/epidemiología , Gonorrea/historia , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/tratamiento farmacológico , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/epidemiología , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Sífilis/historia , Estados Unidos/epidemiología
14.
Ethics Hum Res ; 41(2): 29-34, 2019 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30895754

RESUMEN

The U.S. Public Health Service's sexually transmitted disease (STD) experiments in Guatemala are an important case study not only in human subjects research transgressions but also in the response to serious lapses in research ethics. This case study describes how individuals in the STD experiments were tested, exposed to STDs, and exploited as the source of biological specimens-all without informed consent and often with active deceit. It also explores and evaluates governmental and professional responses that followed the public revelation of these experiments, including by academic institutions, professional organizations, and the U.S. federal government, pushing us to reconsider both how we prevent such lapses in the future and how we respond when they are first revealed.


Asunto(s)
Ética en Investigación/historia , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/ética , Experimentación Humana no Terapéutica/historia , Sujetos de Investigación , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/inducido químicamente , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , United States Public Health Service/ética , Adulto , Niño , Coerción , Decepción , Femenino , Guatemala , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Consentimiento Informado/ética , Masculino , Manejo de Especímenes/ética , Manejo de Especímenes/historia , Estados Unidos , Poblaciones Vulnerables/etnología
16.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 35(2): 337-356, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30274528

RESUMEN

The Sexually Transmitted Disease Inoculation Study of the United States Public Health Service (USPHS) was a short-term deliberate exposure experiment into the prevention of venereal diseases. Between 1946 and 1948, over 1,300 Guatemalan prisoners, psychiatric patients, soldiers, and sex workers were exposed to syphilis, gonorrhoea, and chancroid. USPHS researchers initially proposed hiring sex workers to "naturally" transmit venereal diseases to male subjects who would then be given various prophylaxes. The researchers were interested in studying the effectiveness of new preventative measures. In other words, the USPHS study was designed to transmit venereal diseases heterosexually from an "infected" female body to the men who, it was assumed, were sexually isolated subjects. However, the researchers did record instances of male-to-male disease transmission among their subject populations, instances that challenged the presumption of heterosexuality on which the study was based.


Asunto(s)
Ética en Investigación , Heterosexualidad/historia , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Vacunación/historia , Chancroide/historia , Chancroide/prevención & control , Chancroide/transmisión , Gonorrea/historia , Gonorrea/prevención & control , Gonorrea/transmisión , Guatemala , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Personal Militar , Pacientes , Prisioneros , Trabajadores Sexuales , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/prevención & control , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/transmisión , Sífilis/historia , Sífilis/prevención & control , Sífilis/transmisión , Estados Unidos , United States Public Health Service
18.
Kennedy Inst Ethics J ; 28(2): 145-170, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30100598

RESUMEN

Discussion of reparations for U.S.-Guatemala STD experiments of the 1940s and 50s should be informed by a range of international and U.S. reparation experiences, so that features that impair the effectiveness of repair are avoided, and features that enhance effectiveness of repair are emulated. Two features have contributed to the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of repair elsewhere but have not been critically examined in relation to the Guatemalan experiments: Whether experimental subjects or their families have the opportunity to participate in reparations processes, and whether any group of experimental subjects is intentionally denied recognition. Three advantages of victim participation are explored, and a critique provided of one narrow delimitation of victims. Even if political and moral failings ultimately prevent reparations for Guatemalan experimental subjects, an emphasis on effectiveness and victim-centeredness should nonetheless shape reparations for other, future victims of human rights abuses in experimentation.


Asunto(s)
Compensación y Reparación , Víctimas de Crimen , Experimentación Humana/ética , Violación , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Víctimas de Crimen/historia , Víctimas de Crimen/legislación & jurisprudencia , Familia , Femenino , Guatemala , Historia del Siglo XX , Experimentación Humana/historia , Derechos Humanos , Humanos , Masculino , Violación/legislación & jurisprudencia , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/transmisión , Estados Unidos
19.
PLoS One ; 13(6): e0199421, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29953546

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Numerous studies have evaluated the efficacy of interventions to reduce risk for sexually transmitted infections in adolescents in recent years, but their global effects remain unknown since 2008, the last date of a comprehensive review of prior studies. AIMS: This study aims at evaluating the efficacy of interventions to promote sexual health, reduce STIs and unplanned pregnancies targeted to adolescents available after 2008; and analyzing the moderators of their global efficacy. METHODS: We searched electronic databases and manual searches of some journals focused on STIs in May 2016. The studies evaluated the efficacy of interventions to reduce sexual risk in adolescents (age range: 11-19) anywhere in the world. Effect size of the relevant outcomes for sexual risk was calculated for every study. Analyses incorporated random-effect assumptions for each outcome. The homogeneity in the results was examined with the I2 statistic and its associated 95% confident interval. RESULTS: Data from 63 studies (59,795 participants) were analyzed for behavioral and non-behavioral outcomes. In the short term, interventions had a positive impact in sexual health-related knowledge (Hedges'g = 1.01), attitudes (g = 0.29), self-efficacy toward condom use (g = 0.22), intention to refuse sex (g = 0.56), condom use intention (g = 0.46), and condom use (g = 0.38). In the medium term, positive effects observed at the short-term were maintained, although effect size significantly decreased in all variables. In the long term, interventions improved condom use (g = 0.47). Moderators of the efficacy are discussed. CONCLUSIONS: Sexual health promotion interventions are effective to promote sexual health through increasing condom use. Effects on non-behavioral variables tend to decrease over time, while condom use increased in the long-term. Interventions should focus on the long-term efficacy, especially in behavioral and biological measures.


Asunto(s)
Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/epidemiología , Adolescente , Adulto , Factores de Edad , Niño , Ensayos Clínicos como Asunto , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Masculino , Evaluación de Resultado en la Atención de Salud , Sesgo de Publicación , Medición de Riesgo , Factores de Riesgo , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/prevención & control , Adulto Joven
20.
Sex Transm Infect ; 94(8): 553-558, 2018 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29654061

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: The 1916 Royal Commission on Venereal Diseases was established in response to epidemics of syphilis and gonorrhoea in the UK. In the 100 years since the Venereal Diseases Act (1917), the UK has experienced substantial scientific, economic and demographic changes. We describe historical and recent trends in STIs in the UK. METHODS: We analysed surveillance data derived from STI clinics' statistical returns from 1917 to 2016. RESULTS: Since 1918, gonorrhoea and syphilis diagnoses have fluctuated, reflecting social, economic and technological trends. Following spikes after World Wars I and II, rates declined before re-emerging during the 1960s. At that time, syphilis was more common in men, suggestive of transmission within the men who have sex with men (MSM) population. Behaviour change following the emergence of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s is thought to have facilitated a precipitous decline in diagnoses of both STIs in the mid-1980s. Since the early 2000s, gonorrhoea and syphilis have re-emerged as major public health concerns due to increased transmission among MSM and the spread of antimicrobial-resistant gonorrhoea. Chlamydia and genital warts are now the most commonly diagnosed STIs in the UK and have been the focus of public health interventions, including the national human papillomavirus vaccination programme, which has led to substantial declines in genital warts in young people, and the National Chlamydia Screening Programme in England. Since the 1980s, MSM, black ethnic minorities and young people have experienced the highest STI rates. CONCLUSION: Although diagnoses have fluctuated over the last century, STIs continue to be an important public health concern, often affecting more marginalised groups in society. Prevention must remain a public health priority and, as we enter a new era of sexual healthcare provision including online services, priority must be placed on maintaining prompt access for those at greatest risk of STIs.


Asunto(s)
Monitoreo Epidemiológico , Salud Pública/tendencias , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/epidemiología , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/historia , Infecciones por Chlamydia/diagnóstico , Infecciones por Chlamydia/epidemiología , Condiloma Acuminado/diagnóstico , Condiloma Acuminado/epidemiología , Epidemias/estadística & datos numéricos , Femenino , Gonorrea/epidemiología , Infecciones por VIH/epidemiología , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Homosexualidad Masculina , Humanos , Masculino , Salud Pública/historia , Conducta Sexual , Minorías Sexuales y de Género , Enfermedades de Transmisión Sexual/diagnóstico , Sífilis/epidemiología , Reino Unido/epidemiología
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