Surveillance of sexually transmitted infections in the West Midlands using anonymised individual patient datasets from genitourinary medicine clinics.

I Blair, A T Bodley-Tickell, S Bhaduri, D J White, G Smith, J Shirley, H Mossop, D Natin, J D C Ross
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Abstract

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) declined in the UK during the 1980s and early 1990s but have increased substantially since 1995. Within the overall increase there are important differences in the epidemiology of these infections. The current, aggregate system of STI data collection in the UK provides limited demographic information and is unable to fully explain these differences. More useful information can be obtained using an enhanced surveillance system that collects disaggregate, anonymised, individual patient data including ethnic group and truncated postcode of residence. Such a system has been set up in the West Midlands NHS region. The methodology of the project is described here along with the findings to date. These findings confirm that the burden of STIs disproportionately affects young persons, men who have sex with men, black ethnic minority groups and those living in urban areas. Identifying the groups at greatest risk in this way enables interventions to be more usefully targeted.

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监测性传播感染在西米德兰兹郡使用匿名个人患者数据集从泌尿生殖医学诊所。
英国的性传播感染在20世纪80年代和90年代初有所下降,但自1995年以来却大幅增加。在总体增长中,这些感染的流行病学存在重要差异。英国目前的STI数据收集汇总系统提供的人口统计信息有限,无法完全解释这些差异。更有用的信息可以通过增强的监测系统获得,该系统收集分类、匿名、个体患者数据,包括种族群体和截断的居住地邮政编码。西米德兰兹NHS地区已经建立了这样一个系统。这里描述了该项目的方法以及迄今为止的发现。这些发现证实,性传播感染的负担对年轻人、男男性行为者、黑人少数民族群体和生活在城市地区的人的影响尤为严重。以这种方式确定风险最大的群体,使干预措施更有针对性。
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