Undercurrent

Cases of babies born with syphilis rise during COVID pandemic in Nevada, CDC says

By: - April 13, 2022 12:33 pm
baby foot in hospital

During the 2021 Legislative session, lawmakers passed Assembly Bill 192 requiring emergency rooms at hospitals and other medical facilities admitting pregnant women to examine women for syphilis. (Photo by Vidal Balielo Jr. from Pexels)

Nevada had the nation’s fourth highest rate of babies born with syphilis during 2020, according to a new report from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention.

Data released this week from the CDC showed the state reported 46 cases in 2020, which translates to a rate of 131.2 per 100,000 live births of congenital syphilis, when the mother passes the disease during pregnancy.

New Mexico had the highest rate with 42 cases, or 182.9 cases per 100,000. Texas reported 561 cases, or 148.6 per 100,000 live births. 

Nationwide, the CDC reported 2,148 cases of congenital syphilis, including 149 stillbirths and infant deaths related to the disease in 2020 and early findings 2,268 already reported foi 2021. 

During the 2021 Legislative session, lawmakers passed Assembly Bill 192 requiring emergency rooms at hospitals and other medical facilities admitting pregnant women to examine women for syphilis. 

The bill went into effect July 2021. 

Democratic Assemblywoman Lesley Cohen said at the time that the legislation was a response to high infection rates in previous years. 

“In 2018, we had the highest rates of primary and secondary syphilis in the nation and we had the second highest rates of congenital syphilis,” she said during a bill hearing in May 2021. “The trends haven’t been getting better for us over the last few years.”

During her presentation she said the CDC reported a “289% increase in congenital syphilis between 2015 and 2018” in Nevada.  

The CDC’s most recent findings showed that while there was a 15% increase of syphilis among newborns since 2019 there has been a 235% increase since 2016.

“The COVID-19 pandemic put enormous pressure on an already strained public health infrastructure,” said Jonathan Mermin, director of CDC’s National Center for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, in a statement. “There were moments in 2020 when it felt like the world was standing still, but STDs weren’t. The unrelenting momentum of the STD epidemic continued even as STD prevention services were disrupted.”

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Michael Lyle
Michael Lyle

Michael Lyle (MJ to some) is an award-winning journalist with Nevada Current. In addition to covering state and local policy and politics, Michael reports extensively on homelessness and housing policy. He graduated from UNLV with B.A. in Journalism and Media Studies and later earned an M.S. in Communications at Syracuse University.

Nevada Current is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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