CDC: Stop Washing and Reusing Condoms – By Kashmira Gander (newsweek.com) / Aug 1 2018
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has urged the public not to wash or reuse condoms.
Appearing to acknowledge that most people are aware of this advice, the health agency tweeted last week: “We say it because people do it: Don’t wash or reuse #condoms! Use a fresh one for each #sex act.”
The tweet features a link to the CDC’s page entitled “Condom Effectiveness.” The CDC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
We say it because people do it: Don't wash or reuse #condoms! Use a fresh one for each #sex act. https://t.co/o3SPayRf9m pic.twitter.com/AwkPqE9YMl
— CDC STD (@CDCSTD) July 23, 2018
The page offers advice on how to correctly use male condoms, as well as female options like dental dams.
It highlights the importance of using protection like condoms to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) including HIV and viral hepatitis. Currently, the male condom is the only way to protect against both pregnancy and STIs.
But only around a third of Americans use condoms, according to a CDC report published in August 2017.
Casey Copen, a statistician at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics and report author, said in a statement: “The use of condoms is a public health issue.”
“STDs can lead to long-term consequences, such as infertility,” she said. “Condoms, when used consistently and correctly, reduce the risk of HIV and STDs.”
The tweet comes amid what the CDC has dubbed the STI epidemic as latest figures show more than 2 million cases of gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis were reported in 2016. That amounts to the highest number since records began.
Most new diagnoses were of chlamydia, at 1.6 million, followed by 470,000 gonorrhea and 28,000 of the most infections forms of syphilis (primary and secondary.)
“While all three of these STDs can be cured with antibiotics, if left undiagnosed and untreated, they can have serious health consequences, including infertility, life-threatening ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth in infants, and increased risk for HIV transmission,” the CDC website warns.
Official statistics released earlier this year revealed the number of gonorrhea cases in Alaska spiked by more than half in the year following 2016. In October 2017, health officials issued an alert warning of a statewide outbreak of the condition. The statistics put Alaska below Mississippi as the gonorrhea capital of the U.S.
https://www.newsweek.com/cdc-stop-washing-and-reusing-condoms-1051715