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other drugs
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Oral sex IS sex Got
your attention? Oral sex can be defined as contact of one person's mouth
(active) with the genitals of another person (receptive) male to female, female
to male, female to female or male to male. True, you can't get pregnant, however, oral
sex is not an abstinent behavior and is not risk-free. Sexual
Health Update's Fall '03 publication is devoted to oral sex and sexually
transmitted infections (or STIs.) The following studies are cited in this
publication and citations are available upon request. The
practice of oral sex is fairly common among American adults. Approximately one quarter (27%) of men
and one fifth of women (19%) said that they participated in oral sex the last
time they had sex. Similarly, oral
sex is not uncommon among adolescents and is especially common among college
age. In a study of 545 10-12th
graders Ð 84 % of nonvirgins and 20 % of virgins had participated in oral sex.
High school students in Los Angeles County who consumed alcohol or used
recreational drugs were three times more likely than nonusers to engage in oral
sex. A survey of 300 sexually active college students who volunteered to fill
out a questionnaire reported 86% had practiced oral sex. HPV
(Human Papilloma Virus, the virus associated with genital warts,) and chlamydia
are the most frequently diagnosed STIs at Colby. They can both be transmitted
orally as can herpes, syphilis, gonorrhea and HIV. HPV
exists in over 100 types, of which some 35 cause genital infections. Some types are more virulent than others
and only recently have certain types been associated with cancers of the cervix
and anus. Current evidence shows that 30-60% of sexually active adults are
infected with one or more of the wart viruses. As many as 70% of those infections go unrecognized. However,
even without visible symptoms, i.e. warts, the virus can be transmitted. Chlamydia
is a common bacterial infection.
It can cause inflammation from the urethra to the epididymis in males
and from the cervix to the uterine lining and Fallopian tubes in females. Pain
and or discharge in any of these areas may send patients for treatment but the
infection can remain asymptomatic (result in no symptoms) in 20-30% of males
and 70% of females. It is still transmissible, orally or genitally, when silent. Don't
wait until you get symptoms to be checked. A yearly SHARE examination (sexual
health and reproductive exam) is suggested for anyone, male or female, who has
been sexually active. The
examination at the Health Center is free to Colby students. The exam would
include some testing for sexually transmitted infections. Your practitioner
would recommend which tests would be appropriate after evaluating your risks. BOTTOM
LINE: "Oral sex" is sexual activity and can serve as the transmission
route for a number of sexually transmitted diseases. It should not be considered a "safe" sex alternative to
penile-vaginal or penile-anal intercourse. Latex barriers (condoms or dental
dams) are recommended any time body fluids can be exchanged. Condoms and dams are
available, without charge, at the Health Center. |