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Who's Most Likely to Get the Mpox Shot in U.S.?

When an outbreak of mpox first hit the United States in 2022, a vaccine called Jynneos was available to help protect the most vulnerable population, gay and bisexual men.

Now, there's new data showing which individuals in the LGBTQ+ community were most likely to get vaccinated against the virus.

According to the 

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • December 13, 2024
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  • Genital Herpes Affects 1 in 5 Younger Adults Worldwide

    Genital herpes is widespread the world round among younger adults, with more than 846 million people living with the lifelong sexually transmitted infection, a new review finds.

    About 1 in 5 people younger than 50 live with a genital herpes infectio...

    Cervical Cancer Deaths Fell Dramatically After Advent of HPV Vaccine

    A new study provides good evidence that the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine may be achieving its goal of slashing rates of cervical cancer.

    “We observed a … 62% drop in cervical cancer deaths over the last decade, likely due to HPV vaccination,” said study senior author Ashish Deshmukh...

    Dating Apps Linked to More Hookups That Risk College Students' Health

    College students who use dating apps are more likely to engage in risky sex, endangering their health, a new study shows.

    Those using a dating app were 2.2 times to have had more than one sexual partner over the past year, and 1.4 times more likely to have had sex while under the influence of alcohol, researchers found.

    Dating app users were also 1.8 times more likely to have underg...

    Chlamydia Vaccine Shows Early Promise in Mice

    An experimental vaccine has shown promise in protecting against the sexually transmitted disease chlamydia, researchers report.

    Lab mice given the vaccine were able to rapidly clear subsequent chlamydia infections, and were less likely to develop severe infecti...

    Stop Worrying So Much About Holiday Weight Gain, Experts Say

    Florida resident Joshua Walker isn’t concerned his health will take a hit from all the cakes, pies, cookies and candy that will tempt him during holiday gatherings.

    That’s because he’s armed with a solid diet and exercise routine that will allow for a little indulgence.

    “If Grandma made an apple pie that I’m just looking at and it’s speaking my na...

    America's Epidemic of STDs May Finally Be Slowing

    TUESDAY, Nov. 11, 2024 -- The epidemic of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the United States appears to be cooling off after more than two decades, a new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study says.

    Gonorrhea cases dropped for a second year in 2023, declining...

    Doctors Report First U.S. Cases of Sexually Transmitted Ringworm Rash

    Doctors in New York City are describing the first known U.S. cases of sexually transmitted ringworm, which can cause a nasty rash that can take months to bring under control.

    Despite the name, ringworm isn't any kind of worm but instead is a fungus, Trichophyton mentagrophytes. It's more commonly known as jock itch (when it affects the groin area) or athlete's foot, and can produ...

    Unprotected Sex Boosts Mpox Danger for Gay Men as Drug-Resistant Strain Spreads

    Infection with the mpox virus is five times more likely among gay and bisexual men who engage in unprotected anal sex as the receptive partner, a new analysis reveals.

    The study dovetails with the release of a second report on clusters of mpox cases in California and Illinois of a strain of mpox that's resistant to treatment with the first-line drug

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • October 11, 2024
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  • Twice-Yearly Injection Cuts HIV Risk by 96%, But Will Cost Cut Access?

    It could be a real breakthrough for people at risk for HIV infection: A shot given every six months that reduces their risk by a whopping 96%.

    That's according to new trial results released Thursday by Gilead Sciences, which is repurposing its HIV treatment, the antiviral lenacapavir, as a twice-yearly preventive shot.

    There's a catch, however: Given as either a pill or injection an...

    Federal Judge Rules That U.S. Military Cannot Reject HIV-Positive Enlistees

    People with HIV can no longer be turned away if they try to enlist in the U.S. military, a federal judge has ruled.

    The decision, issued this week by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkma, said the Pentagon&r...

    Not Just Cancer: HPV May Hamper Men's Fertility

    Human papillomavirus (HPV) has largely been seen as a health problem of women, given that it causes nearly all cases of cervical cancer.

    But men also have reason to both fear HPV and get vaccinated against it, a new study says.

    Infection with high-ri...

    FDA Authorizes First At-Home Test for Syphilis

    As syphilis cases surge throughout the United States, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Friday approved the first diagnostic at-home test to spot the bacterial disease.

    "This is the first at-home, over-the-counter test to detect Treponema pallidum [syphilis] antibodies in human blood," the FDA said in a

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • August 16, 2024
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  • Sweden Reports First Case of New Mpox Strain as Africa Outbreak Continues

    As an outbreak of a new strain of mpox continues in Africa, Sweden announced Thursday that it has confirmed the first case in that country.

    Known as the clade I strain, this latest iteration of mpox appears to be spread more easily and cause more severe disease, experts say.

    "A person who sought care at Region Stockholm has been diagnosed with mpox caused by the clade I variant. It...

    WHO Declares Africa Mpox Outbreak a Global Health Emergency

    The World Health Organization on Wednesday made the rare move of declaring an ongoing African outbreak of mpox a global health emergency.

    A new clade (strain) of the virus, plus its troubling spread throughout the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and nearby countries in central Africa, drove the declaration, said WHO director general Dr. Te...

    Studies Support Use of Daily Antibiotic to Prevent STDs in High-Risk Groups

    It's long been known that popping the antibiotic doxycycline within 72 hours of a risky sexual encounter can greatly reduce a person's risk for a sexually transmitted infection (STI).

    In fact, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

  • Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
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  • July 19, 2024
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  • Only About Half of Folks Would Tell New Sex Partner If They Had an STD

    Only about half of people with a sexually transmitted disease would tell a new partner about their infection before having sex, a new review finds.

    Fear prevents many people from revealing their STD to a new sex partner, according to the combined results of 32 previous studies.

    Mpox Is Still Circulating Among U.S. Gay Men

    Though not at numbers seen in the 2022 outbreak, mpox cases are still circulating in the United States, largely among gay and bisexual men, new government data shows.

    According to the U.S. Cente...

    CDC Supports Use of Antibiotic as 'Morning After Pill' to Stop STDs

    In new guidelines released Tuesday, U.S. health officials now recommend that certain people take the antibiotic doxycycline as a morning-after pill to lower the risk of some sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

    The latest recommendations only apply to gay and bisexual men and transgender women who have had an STD in the past year and are at high risk of getting infected again. While pas...

    Spread of Deadlier Mpox Strain in Africa Has CDC Concerned

    The central African nation of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is battling a record number of cases of mpox, fueled by a strain with a higher death rate than the variant that spread in Europe and America in 2022.

    Getting the DRC outbreak under control, and containin...

    FDA Approves First Self-Test Collection Kit for HPV

    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved a kit that will allow women to collect their own vaginal sample for HPV screening, a move that could increase early detection in those at risk for cervical cancer.

    Women will be able to swab themselves in privacy at a doctor's office, clinic...

    Syphilis Is Increasingly Displaying Atypical, Severe Symptoms

    Syphilis cases are on the rise in the United States, and doctors in Chicago say they are increasingly seeing cases that don't display typical symptoms, such as rash or skin ulcers.

    Instead, patients are presenting with headaches or disruptions in their vision or hearing, said a team...

    Climate Change Could Be Good News for Viruses Like COVID

    MONDAY, April 29, 2024 -- Climate change -- and closed windows -- could be aiding the spread of airborne viruses like the one that causes COVID-19, a new study suggests.

    Increased levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and in indoor spaces appear to be a major factor in prolonging the life of COV...

    Screen Pregnant Women for Syphilis, Ob-Gyn Group Advises

    All expecting mothers should get a blood test for syphilis three times during pregnancy, new guidance issued by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends.

    The practice advisory calls on doctors to test for syphilis at a pregnant woma...

    Chlamydia Vaccine Shows Promise in Early Trial

    A chlamydia vaccine has triggered immune responses in an early trial, raising hopes that one day it might help curb the spread of the sexually transmitted infection (STI).

    There is currently no vaccine for chlamydia, which is the most common bacterial STI in the United States, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and ...

    Mpox Vaccine Protection Quickly Fades; Boosters Necessary: Study

    Vaccine protection against mpox fades quickly in the human immune system, even in people who've received the full two-dose regimen, a new real-world study shows.

    Antibody levels fell to low or near zero within the first few months of getting the vaccine, unless the person had previously received a smallpox vaccine, scientists reported Saturday at the European Congress of Clinical...

    Cases of Drug-Resistant Gonorrhea Have Tripled in China, Posing a Global Threat

    A strain of highly antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea first emerged in China in 2016, and cases of this tough-to-treat infection have tripled there in just five years, Chinese researchers report.

    It's a warning to the rest of the world, they said.

    Strains resistant to the first-line treatment ceftr...

    U.S. Mpox Cases Rising Again as Vaccinations Lag

    Mpox cases are climbing again in the United States, with the number of reported infections now twice as high as they were at this time last year, new government data shows.

    In response, public health experts have raised alarms about the increase and stressed that vaccination rates against the disease need to improve.

    "This has the potential to become a fairly prevalent infectious di...

    Drug-Emitting Vaginal Ring Safely Protects Pregnant Women From HIV

    A vaginal ring that emits the antiviral dapivirine has passed safety trials and could shield vulnerable women against HIV infection during pregnancy, a new trial shows.

    "We now have data on the ring's safety during all stages of pregnancy,"said study leader Dr. Felix Mhlanga, a senior lecturer a...

    What Is Mpox, and How Can You Protect Yourself?

    An outbreak of mpox (formerly known as monkeypox) across Europe and North America made headlines in 2022.  

    According to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the 2022 outbreak of mpox (formerly called monkeypox) in the United States involved 31,698 known cases and 56 deaths. G...

    Changes in Gay Men's Behaviors, Not Vaccine, Halted Mpox Outbreak

    New research finds the 2022 mpox outbreak among gay and bisexual men began to slow down after just a few months -- even though just 8% of high-risk people had received the mpox vaccine.

    That suggests that it was changes in gay and bisexual men's sexual behaviors, not the vaccine, that caused the outbreak to subside, researchers concluded.

    "Once the mpox epidemic was recognized, beha...

    Which Families Are Less Likely to Get Teens the HPV Vaccine?

    Well-to-do American families are more likely than poorer families to increase their children's risk of cervical cancer by skipping the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, a new study has found.

    Nearly two-thirds of well-off parents (65%) do not intend to seek out the HPV vaccine for their teens, compared with 40% of disadvantaged parents, researchers report.

    "Parents from socioecono...

    Women With HIV Age Faster, Study Shows

    Women with HIV experience accelerated DNA aging, potentially leading to poorer physical function sooner in life than expected, a new study says.

    Markers of aging measured in blood revealed that women with HIV age faster than their chronological age, according to results published in the

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • February 16, 2024
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  • High-Risk Strains of HPV Could Raise Women's Odds for Heart Death

    Women are four times more likely to die from heart disease and six times more likely to die from stroke if infected with a high-risk strain of human papillomavirus (HPV), a new study warns.

    HPV already is known to cause most cervical cancers, and previous research has suggested that HPV infection might contribute to clogged arteries.

    But this is the first study to draw a link betwee...

    U.S. Syphilis Cases Continue to Climb

    U.S. cases of syphilis have soared past numbers seen just a decade ago, new government statistics show.

    The grim numbers are for 2022, the latest year for which an accurate tally is available.

    More than 202,000 cases were recorded among Americans that year -- a 17% rise over 2021 numbers and an 80% rise over numbers ...

    Many Closeted Gay Men Didn't Receive Mpox Care During Outbreak

    Too many closeted gay and bisexual men didn't receive treatment for infectious mpox during the recent global outbreak, a new report finds.

    It wasn't necessarily because they feared being outed if they sought care, experts said. Instead, these men's separation from the wider LGBT community may have meant they had less information on treatments.

    "I think the lesson here is that there ...

    STD Specialists Warn of Shortage of Vital Syphilis Drug

    As syphilis cases surge across America, a group representing the nation's STD specialists says members are reporting shortages of a drug essential to fighting the disease.

    In a survey from the National Coalition of STD Directors conducted in early November, 46% of sexu...

    COVID Pandemic Set Back U.S. Efforts to Fight HIV

    Here's another casualty of the pandemic: Gains made against another scourge, HIV.

    Progress made in fighting HIV/AIDS across all segments of society was eroded during the crisis, according to a report led by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).

    "Equity in HIV outcomes likely worsened during the pandemic, with decreased access to necessary care," especial...

    California Governor Rejects Bill to Provide Free Condoms to High Schoolers

    A California bill would have made free condoms available for high schoolers, but it was vetoed Sunday by Gov. Gavin Newsom because of cost.

    California has a budget deficit of $30 billion, Newsom noted in his veto of Senate Bill 541....

    Despite New Long-Term Options, People Still Prefer Daily PrEP Pill to Prevent HIV

    New ways to deliver drugs that prevent infection with HIV are out there, but many people still prefer the standard daily PrEP pill, a new study shows.

    "The oral pill is very efficacious when people take it every day, and it really has the potential to curb HIV transmission in the country and play a key role in ending the HIV epidemic,"said

  • Cara Murez HealthDay Reporter
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  • October 3, 2023
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  • CDC Will Recommend an Antibiotic After Sex to Help Prevent Sexually Transmitted Infections

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is poised to recommend use of a powerful antibiotic to prevent sexually transmitted infections.

    On Monday, the CDC issued dr...

    In Mississippi, a Huge Jump in Cases of Babies Born With Syphilis

    The United States is experiencing an alarming wave of congenital syphilis, and one southern state saw a 1,000% rise in babies born with the infection between 2016 and 2022.

    The number of babies born with the infection in Mississippi rose from 10 in 2016 to 110 in 2022. Syphilis is a sexually transmitted bacterial infection. Congenital syphilis occurs when an infected mother passes the dis...

    Study Confirms Effectiveness of Mpox Vaccine

    While it doesn't prevent infection altogether, new research shows the mpox vaccine does reduces the severity of disease in those who fall ill from the virus.

    An international team of scientists found that those people who had either mpox vaccination or a previous infection in 2022 had less severe disease.

    The researchers studied 38 mpox infections in 37 gay and bisexual men; among ...

    U.S. Kids' HPV Vaccination Rate Has Stalled

    For the first time in a decade, the rate at which American adolescents received the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine has not increased, new data show.

    Current guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that both girls and boys receive t...

    Pfizer Warns of Shortage of Antibiotic Used to Fight Syphilis

    Infectious disease experts are warning that a shortage of a key antibiotic for treating the sexually transmitted infection syphilis could make it hard to fight the spread of the disease.

    The United States already has a big problem with syphilis, with cases rising for more than 20 years. Cases increased nearly 75% between 2017 and 2021 alone, bringing the number to more than 176,000 in 202...

    The Women's Health Screenings and Preventive Care Appointments You Need

    Health screenings and preventive care appointments are a key to maintaining long-term health and well-being. By proactively engaging in these practices, women can identify potential health risks early on and take necessary steps.

    This guide will outline the key women's health screenings and care appointments to help you prioritize your health and stay on top of your well-being.

    Mpox Virus Can Replicate on Surfaces for Days: Study

    Most cases of mpox are spread from skin-to-skin contact, but it is possible to catch the virus by touching a contaminated surface in a house or a hospital room, according to a new study.

    Researchers studying this found temperature made a difference. The virus could survive at room temperature on a surface for up to 11 days. At 4 degrees Celsius (39 degrees Fahrenheit), it could survive f...

    CDC Warns That Mpox Could Make a Summer Return

    Public health officials are urging people at risk of contracting mpox, the virus previously called monkeypox, to get vaccinated.

    They are concerned that a slowdown in infections since last summer may not continue.

    "There's a very real risk of there being a surge in mpox cases over the next few months. Most likely, it won't be anywhere near as big as it was last year, and that is be...

    WHO Declares Global Mpox Outbreak Over

    Cases of mpox around the world have dropped dramatically, prompting the World Health Organization (WHO) on Thursday to declare an end to the global health emergency.

    The virus is no l...

    Awareness That HPV Causes Cancer Is Ebbing Among Americans

    The sexually transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV) can cause a range of cancers, but public awareness of this grim fact is slipping in the United States, a new survey finds.

    While nearly 78% of respondents knew that HPV could cause cervical cancer in 2014, that dropped to about 70% in 2020, the investigators found.

    The common virus can also cause oral, anal, vaginal, vulva and peni...