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More cases of ancient sexually transmitted infections than ever since records began – see the increase where you are

More people than ever before were diagnosed with gonorrhoea last year – with doctors warning that sexual health services are at a “crisis point” amid funding cuts and rising demand. There were more cases of the ancient sexually transmitted infection in England last year than at any time since records began over 100 years ago, according to the latest NHS data.

Infections with gonorrhea – mentioned in the Bible and early Greek and Roman writings – increased by 7.5%, from 79,268 diagnoses in 2022 to 85,223 in 2023. Case numbers rose over the past decade, then declined during lockdowns and isolation due to the pandemic, and then returned to record levels.




The number of gonorrhoea diagnoses is now three times higher than in 2012. At the same time, the infection rate – which measures the risk of contracting a disease – has risen from 50.3 infections per 100,000 people in 2012 to 149 per 100,000 last year. That equates to about one in 670 people in England being diagnosed with gonorrhoea.

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But in some parts of the country, particularly London, the risk is much higher. In Lambeth, there were 4,101 gonorrhoea diagnoses last year. Relative to the size of the population, that equates to 1,295 infections per 100,000 people – or about one in 77 people who contract gonorrhoea.

All 15 areas with the highest infection rates were in London. Lambeth was followed by Southwark (983 per 100,000), then Hackney (867 per 100,000). Outside the capital, the risk of contracting gonorrhoea was highest in Liverpool (302 infections per 100,000 inhabitants) and Brighton (292 per 100,000 inhabitants).

Use our interactive map to see the cases and incidence of gonorrhea in your area and learn how they have changed over the past decade.

This comes as the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH) warns that sexual health services are facing growing demand for care amid funding cuts and staffing pressures. The number of consultations carried out by sexual health services in England reached a record 4.61 million in 2023, a 5% increase on the previous year and a 44% increase since 2019, the earliest year for which records are available.