In a stunning admission of failure amid the sexual revolution, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has revised its "Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines" to indicate that the nanny-state government is incapable of ensuring that a hedonistic culture can remain safe from disease. The new report recommends abstinence and/or a monogamous relationship.
UPDATE 12/30/15: New Untreatable Sex Disease Discovered — 'Super Gonorrhea'
For background, read Fictional 'Safe Sex' - Government Losing War on STDs and also read The Only 'Safe Gays' are Celibate Gays, Says U.S. FDA
And yet, Abstinence Education is Illegal in California, Judge Rules
And read how President Obama Wants an End to Abstinence Education, Favoring Anal Sex, and the Obama Administration Wants More Worry-free Sex for Teen Girls
Click headlines below to read previous articles:
Internet Social Media Cause HIV & STD Epidemic Among Young Adults
HIV Rates Rise Among Homosexual Men: Federal Study
Soaring Syphilis Rates Among Homosexual Men Point to HIV Risk
-- From "Feds shift to abstinence, monogamy as 'most reliable' STD prevention" by Paul Bedard, Washington Examiner 6/4/15
In a significant shift, the federal government is now calling abstinence and monogamy "the most reliable way" to avoid sexually transmitted diseases, a $16 billion annual problem that hits as many as 10 million teens a year.
In a very long rewrite of the "Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010," the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dropped the old language that monogamy and abstinence were just "a reliable way" to avoid STDs.
The prevention section now reads: "The most reliable way to avoid transmission of STDs is to abstain from oral, vaginal, and anal sex or to be in a long-term, mutually monogamous relationship with a partner known to be uninfected."
To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.
From "CDC Issues New STD Guidelines" posted at GenomeWeb 6/4/15
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention today updated its sexually transmitted diseases treatment guidelines to help healthcare professionals better manage the more than 20 million cases of STDs in the US annually.
The Sexually Transmitted Diseases and Treatment Guidelines, 2015 provides the first update since 2010. It notably includes recommendations for use of nucleic acid amplification tests, or NAATs, for Trichomonas vaginalis and routine trichomonas screening for high-risk populations.
A "dear colleague" letter to clinicians sent today from the CDC also details, among other items, new guidance for treatment of gonorrhea, chlamydia during pregnancy, and genital warts, and has new screening recommendations for gonorrhea and chlamydia, and for men who have sex with men.
Trichomonas affects about 3.7 million people each year. . . . trichomonas infection is associated with up to a three-fold increase risk of contracting HIV.
To read the entire article above, CLICK HERE.
From "Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010" by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
A reliable way to avoid transmission of STDs is to abstain from oral, vaginal, and anal sex or to be in a long-term, mutually monogamous relationship with an uninfected partner. For persons who are being treated for an STD (or whose partners are undergoing treatment), counseling that encourages abstinence from sexual intercourse until completion of the entire course of medication is crucial. A more comprehensive discussion of abstinence and other sexual practices than can help persons reduce their risk for STDs is available in Contraceptive Technology, 19th Edition. For persons embarking on a mutually monogamous relationship, screening for common STDs before initiating sex might reduce the risk for future disease transmission.
To read the entire report above, CLICK HERE.
From "Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2015" by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
The most reliable way to avoid transmission of STDs is to abstain from oral, vaginal, and anal sex or to be in a long-term, mutually monogamous relationship with a partner known to be uninfected. For persons who are being treated for an STD other than HIV (or whose partners are undergoing treatment), counseling that encourages abstinence from sexual intercourse until completion of the entire course of medication is crucial. A recent trial conducted among women on the effectiveness of counseling messages demonstrated that women whose sexual partners have used condoms may benefit from a hierarchical message that includes condoms, whereas women without such experience might benefit more from an abstinence-only message. A more comprehensive discussion of abstinence and other sexual practices than can help persons reduce their risk for STDs is available in Contraceptive Technology, 20th Edition.
To read the entire report above, CLICK HERE.
Also read how sexualization is making criminals of public school children nationwide.