The transmission dynamics of gonorrhoea: modelling the reported behaviour of infected patients from Newark, New Jersey
- 29 April 1999
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 354 (1384) , 787-797
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1999.0431
Abstract
A survey of the sexual behaviour of gonorrhoea patients in Newark was undertaken to evaluate parameters within a model of gonorrhoea transmission. Modelling work aimed to explain observed epidemiological patterns and to explore the potential impact of interventions. Reported behaviours, along with values derived from the literature, were used within a standard deterministic model of gonorrhoea transmission, where the population was stratified according to sex and rates of sex–partner change. The behaviours reported, particularly among women, are insufficient by themselves to explain the continued existence of gonorrhoea within the population. The majority of symptomatic patients seek treatment within a few days, and report that they do not have unprotected sex while symptomatic. The proportion of patients with low numbers of sex partners suggests that sexual mixing between people categorized according to sexual behaviour is near random. To explain the persistence of gonorrhoea, there must be some patients who, when infected, do not seek care in public clinics. In addition, gonorrhoea incidence in the model is sensitive to change, such that very small reductions in risk behaviour could lead to its elimination. This does not accord with the observed failure of many interventions to eliminate infection, suggesting that the modelled infection is too sensitive to change. The model, which has been influential in gonorrhoea epidemiology, is not consistent with the observed epidemiology of gonorrhoea in populations. Alternative models need to explore the observed stability of gonorrhoea before robust modelling conclusions can be drawn on how best to control infection. However, the current results do highlight the potential importance of asymptomatic infections and infections in those who are diseased and do not attend public health services. Screening and contact–tracing to identify asymptomatic infections in both men and women will be more effective in reaching those who maintain the infection within the community rather than simply treating symptomatic cases.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gonorrhoea in men: clinical and diagnostic aspects.Sexually Transmitted Infections, 1996
- The role of epidemiology and surveillance systems in the control of sexually transmitted diseases.Sexually Transmitted Infections, 1996
- The Dynamic Topology Of Sexually Transmitted Disease Epidemics: Implications For Prevention StrategiesThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1996
- Personal Risk Taking And The Spread Of Disease: Beyond Core GroupsThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1996
- Estimation of a preference matrix for women's choice of male sexual partner according to rate of partner change, using partner notification dataMathematical Biosciences, 1991
- The Concept of Core and its Relevance to the Epidemiology and Control of Sexually Transmitted DiseasesSexually Transmitted Diseases, 1991
- Women Contacts of Men with GonorrheaSexually Transmitted Diseases, 1982
- A Trial of Minocycline Given after Exposure to Prevent GonorrheaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1979
- Dynamics and Control of the Transmission of GonorrheaSexually Transmitted Diseases, 1978
- Asymptomatic Gonorrhea in Men: Caused by Gonococci with Unique Nutritional RequirementsScience, 1977