Welcome to the OutUK series looking at gay men and their health brought to you in association with the NHS website.
Each week we'll tackle a different topic in our A to Z of Gay Health. We'll have features and advice on everything from relationships, sexual health, mental and physical conditions and how to stay fit. You can follow any of links provided below for more information direct from the NHS website, or view any of our Previous A to Z Features.
You should also know that OutUK has produced a special report about: Coronavirus Covid-19.

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This Week - C : Chlamydia

Symptoms of chlamydia

Most people who have chlamydia do not have any symptoms.

If you do get symptoms they can start from 1 week to several months after infection.

Symptoms in women

Chlamydia can cause symptoms in women. These symptoms can affect anyone with a vagina:

  • vaginal discharge that is not normal for you
  • bleeding after sex or between periods
  • a burning feeling when you pee
  • pain in your lower tummy

Symptoms in men

Chlamydia can cause symptoms in men. These symptoms can affect anyone with a penis:

  • white, cloudy or watery discharge from the tip of your penis
  • burning and itching around the testicles (balls) and penis
  • pain and swelling in the testicles
  • a burning feeling when you pee

Other symptoms in men and women

Chlamydia can affect other parts of your body that come into contact with semen or pre-cum. This can cause:

  • pain, bleeding, and discharge from your bottom
  • a sore throat
  • eye redness, pain and discharge

Go to a sexual health clinic or see a GP if:

  • you or a sexual partner think you might have chlamydia
  • you or a sexual partner have had sex without a condom
  • you're pregnant or planning to get pregnant and think you might have chlamydia

Self-test kits

If you do not have symptoms but want a test, you can use a self-test kit for chlamydia at home and send it to a lab to be tested.

If the test shows you have chlamydia, you'll be contacted and told what to do next.

You may be able to get a free self-test kit from:

  • a sexual health clinic
  • some pharmacies

You can also buy a self-test kit for chlamydia from some pharmacies.

Find a pharmacy

If you're aged under 25 you may also be able to get free chlamydia home test kits for under 25s.

What happens at your appointment

A doctor or nurse will ask about your symptoms and sexual partners. They may need to check your penis or vagina.

When you make your appointment, let them know if you'd like someone else to be in the room with you (a chaperone) - this could be someone you know, another doctor, nurse or a trained member of staff.

You may be asked to give a pee sample.

They may use a swab (like a cotton bud) to take a sample of fluid from your penis or vagina. You may be able to do the swab yourself.

They may also need to take a swab from your bottom (anus), throat or eyes if these areas are affected.

You can be tested even if you do not have any symptoms. You may also be offered tests for other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) at the same time.

Contacting sexual partners

If you have chlamydia, your current and recent sexual partners need to be tested.

A sexual health clinic can help you contact your partners, or they can contact them for you.

Treatment for chlamydia

Chlamydia is treated with antibiotics. This may be a single dose, or tablets you take for 7 to 14 days.

Sometimes you may start treatment before the test results come back.

You may need to be tested again after treatment to check you no longer have chlamydia.

If you're pregnant, you'll be tested again 4 weeks after treatment.

Important

Avoid anal and genital penetrative or oral sex until you and your partner (if you have one) have finished treatment and tests show you no longer have chlamydia.

How to avoid getting and spreading chlamydia

Chlamydia is spread through vaginal fluid and semen. It can pass from person to person by having vaginal, oral or anal sex without a condom.

If you have chlamydia when you're pregnant, it can pass to your baby during birth.

There are some things you can do to avoid getting chlamydia and spreading it to others.

Do

  • use condoms when you have vaginal or anal sex

  • use a condom to cover the penis, or a latex or plastic square (dam) to cover the vagina, if you have oral sex

  • get tested once a year, or if you have a new sexual partner

  • complete the full treatment if you or your sexual partner have chlamydia

Don't

  • do not share sex toys (if you do, wash and cover them with a new condom before anyone else uses them)

Complications of chlamydia

If chlamydia is not treated, it can lead to serious complications including:

The sooner you get treatment, the easier these complications are to treat.

Chlamydia in pregnancy

If you're pregnant and have chlamydia that is not treated, it can be passed onto your baby during birth.

If this happens, it can cause an infection in your baby's eyes (conjunctivitis) or lungs (pneumonia). These infections can be treated with antibiotics.



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We'll have more information and advice next week on another topic in our A to Z of Gay Health. We have covered many subjects in this series and you can catch up with all of our Previous A to Z Features.

If you want to find out more about this week's subject you can visit the Original article on the NHS website. If you are worried by any aspect of your health make sure you go and see your doctor or book an appointment at your local clinic.

Photos: LightFieldStudios and one of VladOrlov, Stockcube, darak77, ajr_images or rawpixel.com.

 

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