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Brazil Has 1 Million New Cases of Syphilis Every Year PDF Print E-mail
Written by Benedito Mendonça   
Monday, 21 March 2005

Brazil's Ministry of Health estimates that approximately one million of new cases of syphilis occur in Brazil each year, according to Eduardo Campos, Technical Adviser with the National Program for Sexually Transmitted Diseases and AIDS.

Aiming at reducing the number of victims infected by the disease, the Ministry has produced technical and educational material for the population, as well as awareness campaigns.

"We are developing a study together with the World Health Organization (WHO) about rapid syphilis detection tests," says Campos.

He stresses that these tests will be important in certain regions of Brazil, the North of the country, for example, where access to diagnosis is more difficult.

According to Campos, after AIDS, syphilis is the sexually transmitted disease that most worries health professionals, especially because it can be transmitted to babies during pregnancy.

Syphilis may also be transmitted by blood transfusion, organ transplant, and sexual intercourse, the latter being the most common.

"This is the main way of transmission, and it is not different in the rest of the world. Brazil follows the same rhythm," says Campos.

He affirms that, in Brazil, there has not been any case of infection by blood transfusion, in many years.

Translation: Andréa Alves
Agência Brasil

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Comments (1)Add Comment
From an american journalist
written by Guest, March 21, 2005
Hi there,

I'm working on a story regarding prostitution and HIV and other transmitted disease....I know that many young brazilian women are being recruited to work in Spain and Portugal. I know that they are many times tricked into working in brothels or massage parlors...
I would like to know if you know of any news articles about this trend...anybody in government who is monitoring the situation?

Please e-mail me at my personal e-mail. at ...elvira12@hotmail.com

Thank you very much,
Elvira Viveros/ Journalist
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