Wondimeneh Shiferaw, Judith A Dean, Deborah Mills, Colleen L Lau, Luis Furuya-Kanamori
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: International travel is a significant contributor to the acquisition of sexually transmissible infections (STIs). Despite the high volume of outbound travel from Australia, peaking at 10.8 million travellers in 2023, limited data exist on the burden of overseas-acquired STIs. This study aims to investigate the burden and trends of overseas- and locally acquired STIs in Australia.
Methods: We analysed STI cases notified to Australia's National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) from January 2017 to December 2023. A comparative analysis was conducted by place of acquisition (i.e. overseas versus local), with the geographical origins of overseas-acquired cases mapped using ArcMap and temporal trends assessed across pre-COVID-19, pandemic and post-pandemic periods.
Results: A total of 967 193 records were obtained from NNDSS, of which 188 788 STI cases (11 782 overseas- and 177 006 locally acquired) were included in the analysis. Males were the most affected group (63% of overseas- and 60% of locally acquired), and young adults aged 20-24 years represented a quarter of cases (24.6% of overseas- and 25.9% of locally acquired). The incidence of overseas-acquired STI cases rose nearly threefold, from 12.8 per 100 000 travellers in 2017 to 35.0 per 100 00 travellers in 2019, and then declined during the COVID-19 pandemic due to Australia's travel restrictions to 16.4 per 100 000 travellers in 2020. A surge was observed in 2021, with 46.5 per 100 000 travellers. The most common regions of acquisition were Southeast Asia (n = 2390, 44.6%), North and South America (n = 663, 12.4%) and Northwest Europe (n = 580, 10.8%).
Conclusions: This study highlights the patterns of overseas- and locally acquired STIs in Australia, with chlamydia remaining the most prevalent (but declining since 2021), while gonorrhoea has been increasing, among overseas-acquired cases. Variations in the region of acquisition and demographic factors highlight the critical need for tailored safer-sex advice during pre-travel consultations, particularly for males and young adults travelling to high-prevalence destinations.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Travel Medicine is a publication that focuses on travel medicine and its intersection with other disciplines. It publishes cutting-edge research, consensus papers, policy papers, and expert reviews. The journal is affiliated with the Asia Pacific Travel Health Society.
The journal's main areas of interest include the prevention and management of travel-associated infections, non-communicable diseases, vaccines, malaria prevention and treatment, multi-drug resistant pathogens, and surveillance on all individuals crossing international borders.
The Journal of Travel Medicine is indexed in multiple major indexing services, including Adis International Ltd., CABI, EBSCOhost, Elsevier BV, Gale, Journal Watch Infectious Diseases (Online), MetaPress, National Library of Medicine, OCLC, Ovid, ProQuest, Thomson Reuters, and the U.S. National Library of Medicine.