Sexually transmitted diseases: a neglected public health priority.

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Abstract

Sexually transmitted diseases remain uncontrolled although millions of cases occur annually in the United States. The advent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), which is also a sexually transmitted disease, has not altered this situation. The major portion of federal funding for sexually transmitted diseases is allocated to a search for an AIDS vaccine or cure. State health department funding for sexually transmitted diseases, although only a small fraction of the $1.3 billion AIDS research budget of the National Institutes of Health, is largely consumed by AIDS. A single adequately funded sexually transmitted disease control program that applies well-established public health principles for the control of communicable diseases would make sense. However, a consensus to develop and support such a program does not exist in the United States.

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APA

Yankauer, A. (1994). Sexually transmitted diseases: a neglected public health priority. American Journal of Public Health, 84(12), 1894–1897. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.84.12.1894

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