February 25, 2003
The department has been distributing flyers in neighborhoods and interviewing residents who have had sexual contact with those who tested positive for syphilis. "They're going out to draw blood as opposed to waiting for people to come in," Wright said. "They're going to nightclubs and other places."
Wright said the department was trying to stop the disease with information because syphilis exhibits almost no initial symptoms. A person with primary syphilis will see only a small sore, which disappears within a few weeks whether treated or untreated. Those not treated will enter secondary syphilis, characterized by hair loss and a brownish skin rash that can appear on the palms and soles of the feet. Tertiary syphilis, which can persist for years, brings on complications including serious problems with the eyes, ears, heart, lungs and liver, as well as mental illness and neurological damage. Untreated tertiary syphilis can be fatal. Unchecked, the disease is quickly transmitted among people who have multiple sex partners.
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