Sexually transmissible infections (STI's)
Sexually transmissible infections (STIs) are infections that can be passed on from one person to another during sex. The most common STIs in Australia are genital herpes, genital warts, chlamydia, trichomoniasis, gonorrhoea, hepatitis B, syphilis, and HIV.Find out more about these and other STIs
- Bacterial vaginosis
- Candidiasis/thrush
- Chlamydia
- Crabs/pubic lice
- Genital herpes
- Genital warts / HPV infection
- Gonorrhoea
- Hepatitis A
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis C
- HIV/AIDS
- Non-specific urethritis
- Scabies
- Syphilis
- Trichomoniasis
How do you get an STI?
If you have had unprotected sex, you may be at risk of an STI.STIs can be passed from person to person through:
- vaginal, oral and anal sex
- close skin-to-skin sexual contact (eg. foreplay, touching the genitals, mutual masturbation)
- direct blood-to-blood contact
- pregnancy or childbirth (from mother to child)
- sharing injecting drug equipment.
Symptoms
Many STIs have no obvious symptoms, so a person can often have an STI without knowing it. A person with an STI may look and feel perfectly healthy.While some infections appear to go away without treatment, they actually stay active in the body (eg. in the bloodstream or lining of your throat, cervix or anus). This means that you can pass an STI onto other sexual partners and even your baby without knowing that you are infected.
Girls may notice:
- itching, sores, blisters or lumps inside and/or around the vagina or anus
- pain low in the tummy
- pain during sex
- unusually heavy periods, bleeding between periods, or bleeding after sex
- unusual vaginal discharge
- pain/burning when passing urine and/or frequent urge to pass urine
- rectal pain/discharge.
- discharge from the penis
- sores, blisters or lumps on the penis, pubic area or around the anus
- pain/burning while passing urine and/or frequent urge to pass urine
- pain in the scrotum
- rectal pain/discharge.
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