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Spontaneous Remission Of Sexually Transmitted Diseases Must Be Considered In Randomised Controlled Trials

Rotheram-Borus et al., 2011Other/Unknown

Rotheram-Borus, M. J., Wu, Z., Li, L., Detels, R., Liang, L. J., & NIMH Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial Group. (2011). Spontaneous remission of sexually transmitted diseases must be considered in randomised controlled trials. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 87(4), 305. doi:10.1136/sextrans-2011-050009

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Abstract

Randomised controlled trials that test biomedical interventions to reduce sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have had very mixed results,1 2 as have behavioural trials.3 4 It is only in the past 10 years that the field has recognised that chlamydia resolves itself without treatment in 50% of the cases,4 although the estimates range from 13% to 60%.5–7 The length of time to clear chlamydia infection varies from 60 days in women to up to 15 months in men.5 The speed of resolution is also subject …

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