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NEW CHALLENGE FOR COMBATING SYPHILIS AS IT RESURFACES IN LONDON
04 June 2007 - Society for General Microbiology
| The Federation of Infection Societies conference in Cardiff heard that cases of Syphilis are on the rise in Britain, putting infants at risk of dying by having the disease passed on by their mothers during pregnancy. |
Syphilisis is returning in young women of childbearing age, and therefore also in their newborn babies. Many GP's and clinics could be be missing cases of infant syphilis because they are unfamiliar with the symptoms of the disease which until recently had become rare. “Congenital syphilis is a preventable disease and its re-emergence in the United Kingdom reflects a failure of prenatal care delivery systems, as well as syphilis control programmes”, says Dr Rana Chakraborty of St George’s Hospital in London. “We looked at 12,600 women attending a south London hospital antenatal clinic over 3 years, of whom 70 tested positive for syphilis. We found that of 42 women who were assessed as posing a medium level risk of transmitting infectious syphilis to their child, 26 of them, or 62%, received no follow-up blood tests”. According to the St George’s researchers, medical guidelines to prevent the spread of the disease exist, but are not being uniformly followed. At the clinic secure procedures were not in place to ensure that women were appropriately referred, investigated, and their disease managed. They fear that as syphilis infection in women of childbearing age increases, this may lead to unrecognised cases of congenital syphilis in the United Kingdom, a disease which is treatable, but can be fatal in infants. “Our investigation raises concerns about the effectiveness of the present syphilis control strategy”, says Dr Chakraborty. “Anecdotal reports suggest that many more cases of congenital syphilis have been seen than are reported in medical journals, and if control strategies are not improved an increasing number of cases will emerge as the epidemic progresses”. “Fortunately no infants were born showing symptoms of syphilis during our study, and we hope that when a re-audit is carried out locally we can show an improvement in our management of antenatal syphilis”, says Dr Chakraborty. “However, we are very concerned about how the problem is being managed nationally”.
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About: Society for General Microbiology
The Society for General Microbiology is the largest microbiology society in Europe, and has over 5,500 members worldwide. The Society provides a common meeting ground for scientists working in research and in fields with applications in microbiology including medicine, veterinary medicine, pharmaceuticals, industry, agriculture, food, the environment and education.The SGM represents the science and profession of microbiology to government, the media and the general public; supporting microbiology education at all levels; and encouraging careers in microbiology. |
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