Informing Your Partner You Have Contracted an STD
Something is not quite right. You go visit your doctor and your
suspicions have been confirmed, you've contracted a sexually transmitted
disease, or STD. Your first reaction is shock and disbelief, quickly
followed by anger. Depending on the particular STD that you have,
some like chlamydia, are easily treated, while others, including
HIV can be deadly.
This situation arises in the lives of hundreds of thousands of
people in North America alone every year. Even though safe sex is
being taught at schools and is well publicized by the media and
local health departments, the rate of infection does not seem to
be dropping. After getting over the immediate shock of the diagnosis,
you have to decide how to deal both physically and emotionally with
this issue. For most people, the emotional side is just as hard,
or even harder to deal with than the physical side of things.
First of all, you have to figure out from whom you've contracted
this disease. At this point in time, most people are very angry
with the person they believe responsible. Regardless, you have to
deal with the situation like an adult. There are many ways in which
this might play out:
In one possible scenario, you are single and have been with multiple
partners in the last few months. It is your obligation to contact
these people and tell them that you have contracted an STD and that
they had best get examined. In many countries, you are obliged to
do this by law, in fact, most health clinics won't let you
leave without giving the names of the partners you have had contact
with. While it is very embarrassing to call up someone that you
may have had a little fling with and inform them as to the situation,
you absolutely must do it. If they have the condition as
well, they could be passing it along unknowingly to other people.
In a second possible scenario, you are single, have contracted
an incurable STD such as HIV, Hepatitis, or Herpes. You have already
gone through the above step and you are trying to get on with your
life. You start dating someone new and they want to have sexual
relations with you. Maybe you're stalling because you don't know
what to do.
YOU MUST TELL YOUR PARTNER BEFORE ENGAGING IN A SEXUAL RELATIONSHIP
WITH THEM.
No matter how awkward and embarrassing it is, it has to be done.
You are putting someone else's health and possibly life at risk
because of your own selfish desires if you don't. If this is a permanent
part of your life, then your new partner has a right to know the
risks involved in having sex with you. They must decide for themselves
whether or not to proceed after you have made them better able to
evaluate the particular risk to them. For example, with hepatitis
or herpes, you may often participate in intercourse safely if you
are using a condom (with herpes, you must also make sure that you
are not having a flare-up) but there are no guarantees. Herpes may
be rarely transmitted while wearing a condom and with no visible
signs of outbreak due to invisible viral shedding. With HIV the
line is fuzzier, as there is more than one way that the disease
can be transmitted. In any case, it is up to your new partner to
decide whether these risks are worth it.
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