Ar. Brathwaite et Jp. Figueroa, SURVEY OF PATIENTS WITH SEXUALLY-TRANSMITTED DISEASES SEEN BY PRIVATEPHYSICIANS IN JAMAICA, West Indian Medical Journal, 46(2), 1997, pp. 43-46
A survey of physicians in private practice in Jamaica was conducted be
tween March and September 1993 to provide a descriptive analysis of th
e occurrence of patients with sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) see
n in their practices. Questionnaires were delivered to 371 physicians
of whom 127 (34%) responded, completing 683 (men 353, women 330) indiv
idual patient questionnaires Each physician collected data over a peri
od of one week. The median ages of the men and women were 27 years and
26 years, respectively. 464 (68%) patients were being seen for the fi
rst time for symptomatic STDs, and the visit was a follow-up for 132 (
19%) who had been previously diagnosed; 40 (6%) patients were asymptom
atic contacts referred by a sex partner, and 12 (2%), who were asympto
matic, asked for a 'check up'. A history of previous STD was given by
358 (52%) patients. 470 (69%) patients had a genital discharge (M, 65%
; F, 73%; p = 0.017), 52 (8%) had anogenital lesions (M, 10%; F, 5%; p
= 0.013) and 45 (7%), inguinal lymphadenopathy (M, 10%; F, 3%; p = 0.
002). Among women, 131 (40%) had lower abdominal pain on examination a
nd 105 (32%) had cervical excitation tenderness or pain suggesting pel
vic inflammatory disease (PID). A working diagnosis of gonorrhoea was
made in 273 (40%) patients, trichomoniasis in 121 (18%), nongonococcal
infection in 114 (17%), syphilis in 60 (9%), herpes genitalis in 20 (
3%) and chancroid in 11 (2%). PID was diagnosed in 121 (37%) women and
nongonococcal urethritis in 98 (28%) men. The most frequently prescri
bed treatments were for chlamydia, gonorrhoea and trichomoniasis. In g
eneral, working diagnoses correlated well with clinical observations a
nd treatment given, matched with diagnosis according to national guide
lines. A comparison of the STD burden between the public and private s
ectors was not possible because of sample bias.