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Volume 8

Epidemiology: Open Access

ISSN: 2161-1165

Epidemiology 2018

September 17-19, 2018

September 17-19, 2018 | Rome, Italy

8

th

International Conference on

Epidemiology & Public Health

Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections and their underreporting in a health region of Portugal,

from 2015 to 2017

Ana Pinto de Oliveira, Oliveira C

and

Guarda L

Arnaldo Sampaio Public Health Unit, Portugal

A

lthough public health surveillance system data are widely used to describe the epidemiology of communicable disease,

occurrence of sexually transmitted infections may be misrepresented by under-reporting. Reporting of cases of notifiable

sexually transmitted infections is important in the planning and evaluation of disease prevention and control programs, in the

assurance of appropriate medical therapy, and in the detection of common-source outbreaks.

This study was carried out to examine the relationship between case-reporting of notifiable sexually transmitted infections in

the Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System and the medical diagnosis recorded in Health Management Information System,

of Regional Health Administration of Lisbon and the Tagus Valley.

Data on reported cases of notifiable sexually transmitted infections, in the geographical area covered by Arco Ribeirinho Health

Centre Assembly, from January 2015 to December 2017, were obtained from the Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System at

Arnaldo Sampaio Public Health. Data regard medical diagnosis in the same geographical area and time period were achieved

in Health Management Information System, of Regional Health Administration of Lisbon and the Tagus Valley.

From 2015 to 2017, 167 cases of sexually transmitted infections were notified in Ribeirinho Health Centre Assembly. Twenty-

eight perccnt of cases were syphilis, 25.7% of cases were gonorrhoeae, 18.5% of cases were VIH and 27.7% of cases were notified

with at least one other STI. Most of reported cases were observed in Alto Seixalinho (27.5%), Baixa da Banheira (19.1%), and

Montijo-Afonsoeiro (16.1%) counties.

Of 487 STIs medical diagnosis, 92 were reported to the National System Epidemiological Surveillance, corresponding to 65.7%

of underreporting. The majority of these under-reported cases were for VHB and VHC (92.2%) and VIH (80.9%). This study

underlines the need to increase the percentage of STIs notified to the Health Authority.

Biography

Ana Pinto de Oliveira has her expertise in microbiology, public health and disaster medicine. She is a university professor of disaster medicine and humanitarian action and

for 15 years she was an assistant professor of microbiology and a researcher in microbiology field. She had work done in epidemiology of Burkholderia cepacia in cystic

fibrosis patients and in pre-natal diagnosis (virus). Currently she is enrolled in International Health PhD, in a post graduate course of humanitarian missions, at Red Cross

School and in the residence of Public Health. The first degree is Biology with a Master degree in Microbiology.

na.pinto.oliveira@arslvt.min-saude.pt

Ana Pinto de Oliveira et al., Epidemiology (Sunnyvale) 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2161-1165-C1-020