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KFF Poll: Most Americans Are Unaware of How Common STIs Are Among
Adults and That Rates Are Rising
A
new KFF poll examines the public’s knowledge and
attitudes about sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and finds that while
knowledge about how STIs are transmitted is high, large majorities are
unaware of how common STIs are among adults in the United States.
About
one-third of adults (36%) know that STIs have become “more common” over the
past ten years -- similar to the share who say they “don’t know enough to
say” (38%). In addition, few (13%) know that over half of the people in the U.S.
will get an STI sometime during their lifetime.
Slightly
more than half (54%) of the public say they or someone they know has had an
STI. Nearly six in 10 (58%) women say they know someone who has ever had an
STI, as do half of men. Older adults are less likely to know someone compared
to younger age groups (18-29 year olds: 54%; 30-49 year olds: 63%; 50-64 year
olds: 57%; 65 and older: 36%).
Only
a fraction of the public (8%) is worried about contracting an STI in the next
year, but larger shares of younger people, ages 18-29, express concern (20%).
About one in ten Black adults (13%) and Hispanic adults (13%) and 5% of White
adults say they are worried they may personally contract an STI in the next
year.
Knowledge
about treatment is mixed, but knowledge about transmission is high. About
half of the public know certain common STIs are curable with medications.
Slightly more than half of adults know gonorrhea and chlamydia are curable
(56% and 54%, respectively), and genital herpes is not curable (59%). Fewer
are aware that syphilis is curable (45%). In contrast, a large share of the
public is aware that STIs are often asymptomatic, yet transmissible.
In
addition to these poll findings, KFF has an updated fact sheet about STIs that includes an overview
of STIs and reviews how STI prevention and treatment services are financed in
the US.
METHODOLOGY
Designed
and analyzed by public opinion researchers at KFF, the poll was conducted
December 20-30, 2019 among a nationally representative probability-based
sample of 1,215 adults including an oversample of 351 women, 18-49 years old.
Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish online (1,100) and on the
phone (115). The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage
points for the full sample and 6 percentage points for women, 18-49. See
topline for margin of sampling error for other subgroups.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is
a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, California.
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Tuesday, February 18, 2020
Most Americans Are Unaware of How Common STIs Are Among Adults and That Rates Are Rising
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