A community-based effort to eliminate syphilis in the United States 2025

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From 2016 to 2022, the rate of maternal syphilis rose 222% in the United States, reaching 280.4 per 100,000 births in 2022. Increases in syphilis rates were widespread, rising for all maternal race and Hispanic-origin and age groups, prenatal care categories, and nearly all reporting areas.
Defining the objectives of syphilis control. Public health syphilis control efforts have typically sought to decrease the rate of syphilis. That objective is worthwhile, and the US currently has a national goal to decrease syphilis incidence to under
In 2019, the Ministry of Health published the National Syphilis Action Plan to guide a systematic and coordinated health sector response to stop the increase in syphilis, eliminate inequities, eliminate congenital syphilis, improve testing and treatment, and ensure high quality surveillance.
It was an ambitious plan, combining intensified traditional approaches in such a way as to generate new synergy to enhance the effectiveness of these approaches to accomplish the goal of reducing PS syphilis cases in the United States to 1,000 or fewer (a rate of 0.4 per 100,000 population) and to increase the number
Dont fool around with syphilis. A national campaign launches to raise awareness of the sexually transmissible infection (STI) syphilis and the current outbreak happening across Australia. We have launched a campaign on infectious and congenital syphilis.
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What Is the STI National Strategic Plan? aims to reverse the recent dramatic rise in STIs in the United States. The STI Plan sets a vision as well as goals, objectives, and strategies to respond to this STI epidemic. It also includes indicators with measurable targets to track progress.
American Indian and Alaska Native people had the highest rate of primary and secondary syphilis cases in 2023, at roughly 58 per 100,000. The rate of congenital syphilis also was highest in connection with American Indian and Alaska Native mothers in 2023, at about 681 cases per 100,000 live births.

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