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Spill the tea on STI’s - A collaborative survey with ATMS & Project Gender 2024/ 2025

With the help of Project Gender, ATMS surveyed 1518 New Zealanders in December of 2024 about their experiences with STIs, STI testing, condom use and social stigma around safer sex practices. This was an online survey distributed to our database and via social media.

Survey background & methods

We used a mixed-method survey using quantitative & qualitative research methods to understand the experiences of a diverse range of respondents across New Zealand. The study involved a self-reported questionnaire about STIs, STI testing, condom use & stigma and shame associated with STIs. The study aims to normalize conversations around safer sex and STIs, encouraging safe sex practices as an essential part of our sexual wellness.

Our respondents ranged in age from 18 to 70.

STI state of the nation in Aotearoa New Zealand

According to the Institute of Environmental Science and Research (ESR), rates of STIs are on the rise across New Zealand. There are currently:

Source:

ESR: Sexually Transmitted Infections in New Zealand Supplementary Annual Surveillance Report 2023.

01. STI testing by the numbers

Unfortunately, the testing rates aren't looking too good. And there's one group that is seriously letting the team down. Straight men.

71% of respondents reported having been tested for an STI. For straight men, 47% of respondents said they had never been tested, and 90% are not getting tested regularly. By contrast, women are four times as likely as straight men to be tested regularly.

And this gap is even larger for those aged 35+: 36% of women over 35 are getting regular STI tests, compared to only 7% of straight men.

When did they last get tested?

According to current guidelines in New Zealand, sexually active people should be tested for an STI at least once every 12 months, and every 3 - 6 if they have multiple partners or new partners. So how are we stacking up against the guidelines?

We are not being tested enough, with only 44% of respondents getting tested within the last 12 months. Because of our low testing rates, we can assume that the rates of STIs will be higher. Without regular testing, many cases will go unreported.

02. STI education

STI education is so important to ensure that people know when to get tested, what a test entails, how to treat STIs, and of course, how to prevent STIs in the first place. When it comes to STI and prevention information, 64% of respondents get their information from their GP, but increasingly people are finding this information online too.

17% get STI information from online magazines (like Women's Health, Men's Health & Cosmopolitan), 6% get information from podcasts and blogs and 18% get information from social media. For younger folks, it's even higher, with 32% of respondents accessing STI information from social media.

Although testing numbers are low across the board, 78% of respondents felt they knew enough about common STI symptoms to know when to get tested. 12% said they didn't know enough and 10% said they weren't sure.

03. STI testing

The way that people test may be changing. 59% of respondents say they get tested at their GP and 37% say they get tested at a sexual health clinic. However, 4% of respondents say they use at-home test kits with 1% purchasing those at a pharmacy and 3% buying their tests online.

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04. Comfort with STI testing

It seems that the number may rise over the next few years as at-home tests become more common as our respondents reported buying an at-home test to be the least awkward option when it comes to getting tested.