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Indonesia
This Week in AsiaPeople

Syphilis and stigma: how cheating husbands are harming Indonesian women and babies

  • The government says sexually transmitted infections are rising with wives disproportionately affected, more so than gay men and the partners of sex workers
  • 20-45 per cent of HIV transmission is via mother to child, but stigma means many do not get tested for it or for syphilis and other dangerous infections, or receive treatment

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There are fears in Indonesia that parents are passing on syphilis and HIV to their newborn babies. Photo: Shutterstock
Aisyah Llewellyn
When Meli*, a 36-year-old housewife in Indonesia’s Medan city, fell ill with what she thought was a urinary tract infection, she tried to treat it with over-the-counter medicine from her local pharmacy.
“I had suffered from UTIs before,” she said. “So I didn’t think much of it at first.”

The symptoms, which included painful urination and vaginal bleeding, continued even after Meli received stronger medication from a urologist when the pharmacy drugs did not work.

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Finally, after telling the urologist that she was also suffering from vaginal itching, burning and stinging, Meli was sent to a gynaecologist who ordered tests for sexually transmitted infections (STIs).

Only then did the Sumatra homemaker learn that she had chlamydia and trichomoniasis – common STIs caused by parasites.

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“I was bowled over,” she said. “I had only ever had sex with my husband, whom I had been married to for eight years, and I had been previously tested for STDs as part of screening when I was pregnant with my son.”
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