Hello all!
First time poster, but long time lurker. Something I’ve been getting myself in a spin about lately is around STD testing. Myself and my partner, A, have been on a semi-annual testing schedule and have been tested for HIV, Gon, Chlam.
At my annual physical, my doctor just said “do you want us to do STD testing” and I said “sure”. This time they added in HSV 2 (Herpes Type 2). It came out negative, and when A got her recent panel it came up Negative too. All good there.
However, reading up about HSV 2, I understand it’s exceptionally common, and completely incurable. In fact, I believe most clinics don’t even routinely screen for it. It also seems the case that the stigma of the infection is way worse than the actual symptoms!
What I’m concerned about is that as we both interact with other partners, that we risk catching a really non-threatening virus that will cause more mental damage than anything else. Silently knowing that you don’t have it is probably less of a concern than knowing and mentally agonizing.
We always use condoms outside of our partnership - we are hierarchical, but I know that only reduces the risks by 30% or so.
I’m really unsure what to do. Should we just not have it on our test list? Should we ask new partners to get tested for it?
I’m really keen to hear peoples approaches to testing, because I can’t see a lot of material on it around!
Thanks in advance.
First time poster, but long time lurker. Something I’ve been getting myself in a spin about lately is around STD testing. Myself and my partner, A, have been on a semi-annual testing schedule and have been tested for HIV, Gon, Chlam.
At my annual physical, my doctor just said “do you want us to do STD testing” and I said “sure”. This time they added in HSV 2 (Herpes Type 2). It came out negative, and when A got her recent panel it came up Negative too. All good there.
However, reading up about HSV 2, I understand it’s exceptionally common, and completely incurable. In fact, I believe most clinics don’t even routinely screen for it. It also seems the case that the stigma of the infection is way worse than the actual symptoms!
What I’m concerned about is that as we both interact with other partners, that we risk catching a really non-threatening virus that will cause more mental damage than anything else. Silently knowing that you don’t have it is probably less of a concern than knowing and mentally agonizing.
We always use condoms outside of our partnership - we are hierarchical, but I know that only reduces the risks by 30% or so.
I’m really unsure what to do. Should we just not have it on our test list? Should we ask new partners to get tested for it?
I’m really keen to hear peoples approaches to testing, because I can’t see a lot of material on it around!
Thanks in advance.