A $145,000 campaign to promote syphilis awareness and prevention is
getting people's attention, officials say, with a growing number of
people visiting an information website and calling a hotline number
featured on hard-to-miss posters throughout the city.
The campaign, launched in July in response to a high number of reported cases, is the project of the Syphilis Elimination Task Force, a partnership between the Chicago public health department and community members.
Posters announcing that "syphilis is back" are plastered across CTA
buses, Red Line stations, and businesses between downtown and
Evanston, an area where most reported cases have been clustered, according to Beau Gratzer, director of HIV/STD
prevention at the Howard Brown Clinic in Lakeview.
The posters, which include the hotline number and a website address, are not going unnoticed. According to Anderson, visits to the website have jumped from approximately 600 a day to about 800 a day since they went up.
The posters are also generating more calls to the
state's HIV/AIDS and STD hotline. Hotline coordinator Jill Dispenza
said 51 people called after seeing the bus signs in July, compared to
three in June. The hotline receives 1,500 calls a month.
The task force is also working to target its
message to reflect the sexually-transmitted disease's increasing
prevalence among men who have sex with men. Information tables have
been set up at the Pride Parade and Northhalsted Market Days.
A nationwide anti-syphilis effort began in 2003 in response to an outbreak that began two years earlier, concentrated among men living in major metropolitan areas who had sex with other men, Gratzer said.
Chicago was one of eight cities to receive a special grant of nearly $1 million from the Centers for Disease Control. The
campaign ran from October 2003 through 2004, according to
Anderson.
It is too soon to say whether the current campaign will result
in fewer cases. In 2006, the last year for which figures are available,
the health department recorded 295 cases, down from a peak of 418 cases
in 2005. Despite the decline, the numbers were still high enough to
place the city in "outbreak" status, Anderson said.
In 2003, the year in which the lowest number of new cases was recorded since the outbreak began, there were 267 cases.
Nationwide, the CDC has reported 6,440 new cases of syphilis so far this year, up from 6,100 in 2006.
Health officials say the surge in new cases is particularly disturbing because the
CDC had thought the disease, which is easily treated with antibiotics, was almost eliminated. According to a
CDC report, prevalence was so low in 1998 that the disease was expected to be classified as eradicated by 2005.
While easily treated, syphilis is not easily detected, health officials
say, characterized by symptoms that can go unnoticed or are mistaken
for other ailments.
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