Pelvic inflammatory disease primary prevention

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

  • Risk reduction against sexually transmitted diseases through abstinence or barrier methods such as condoms, see human sexual behavior for other listings.
  • Going to the doctor immediately if symptoms of PID, sexually transmitted diseases appear, or after learning that a current or former sex partner has, or might have had a sexually transmitted disease.
  • Getting regular gynecological (pelvic) exams with STD testing to screen for symptomless PID. [1]
  • Discussing sexual history with a trusted physician in order to get properly screened for sexually transmitted diseases.
  • Regularly scheduling STD testing with a physician and discussing which tests will be performed that session.
  • Getting a STD history from your current partner and insisting they be tested and treated before intercourse.
  • Understanding when a partner says that they have been STD tested they usually mean chlamydia and gonorrhea in the US, but that those are not all of the sexually transmissible diseases.
  • Treating partners so you don't become reinfected or they do not infect another.

References

  1. Smith KJ, Cook RL, Roberts MS (2007). "Time from sexually transmitted infection acquisition to pelvic inflammatory disease development: influence on the cost-effectiveness of different screening intervals". Value Health. 10 (5): 358–66. doi:10.1111/j.1524-4733.2007.00189.x. PMID 17888100.

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