December 18, 2003
THURSDAY, Dec. 19 (HealthDayNews) -- The surging popularity of Internet dating
is behind the alarming rise in syphilis cases among gay men in San
Francisco, new research says.
Last year, San Francisco recorded almost 500 new cases of syphilis, the highest
rate in a generation and a more than tenfold increase over 1998. Of the new
cases, 434 occurred in gay men, who now account for about 90 percent of new
syphilis cases in the city.
Much of the spike, researchers say, can be linked to the ease of finding sex
partners on Internet sites, which have been called the "bathhouses of the 21st
century."
The proportion of gay or bisexual men with syphilis who reported meeting sex
partners online nearly tripled, from 12 percent in 2000 to about 33 percent by
2002. That dwarfed the share of men who made pickups at bars (20 percent),
bathhouses (13 percent), sex clubs (12.6 percent), or adult bookstores (5
percent).
In the second half of 2002, 37 percent of gay or bisexual men with syphilis said
they used the Internet to meet other men, according to the research published
in the Dec. 19 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a journal of the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Data from this year suggest that more than half the men now seeking other men
for sex do so on the Web, says Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, a sexual health expert at
the San Francisco Department of Public Health and a member of the research
group.
"It continues to increase," says Klausner. "In 2003, we're up to 56 percent."
The good news, according to disease control experts, is that unlike pickups at
bathhouses, bars or bookstores, men who meet over the Internet leave a
paper trail of sorts -- an e-mail address. That allows public health officials
to confidentially alert sex partners of infected men to the possibility they,
too, might
be infected.
Syphilis, once considered deadly, is easily treated with a single shot of
penicillin and, if caught early, doesn't cause permanent harm.
Klausner and his colleagues have been working with Internet service providers
(ISPs) and specific sites to promote safe sex awareness and testing for sexual
infections on their match pages.
Gay-oriented sites have tended to be quite willing to help, Klausner says. But,
he adds, America Online (AOL), which hosts meeting rooms, has ignored
repeated requests to address the issue.
The Virginia-based AOL, the nation's largest ISP, did not make anyone
immediately available for comment Thursday.
Internet dating is enormously popular among America's singles, straight and gay
alike. Many predominately heterosexual sites, like Match.com and
JDate.com, also serve homosexual clientele, who also have access to exclusively
gay sites such as Gay.com, glimpse.com, and Male2Male.com.
Perry Halkitis, a psychologist at New York University who studies gay issues,
says people who use the Internet to find sex often are "highly sexually
compulsive. They have rash, uncontrollable desires for sex that they can't seem
to keep under control."
Before the rise of online dating, these people, gay and straight, had to venture
out to meet potential sex partners. Not so anymore.
"You can do it 24 hours a day from the comfort of your living room," Halkitis
says. Not only does the Internet provide unprecedented access to the local
dating scene, he adds, its doors open onto the whole world of seekers.
The jump in syphilis cases is related to HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
Two-thirds of the men in San Francisco with syphilis also were HIV-positive.
Many
gay men with HIV feel they have nothing to lose by having unprotected sex,
Halkitis says, or with men who have the virus as well. "They have a belief that
there's no real risk for them," he adds.
However, in addition to putting themselves at risk of other sexually transmitted
infections, such as syphilis and gonorrhea, they also expose HIV-negative men
to the AIDS virus.
The incidence of HIV among gay and bisexual men in the United States rose 17
percent between 1999 and 2002, in part because of this unsafe behavior,
Halkitis says.
More information
Learn about syphilis from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the
National Institutes of Health.
SOURCES: Jeffrey Klausner, M.D., director, STD prevention and control services,
San Francisco Department of Public Health; Perry N. Halkitis, Ph.D.,
assistant professor and interim chair, department of applied psychology, New
York University, New York; Dec. 19, 2003, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report
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