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originally posted by: Violater1
A sexually-transmitted disease called Donovanosis, that causes beefy red ‘flesh-eating’ genital ulcers, is becoming more common in the UK, a doctor has warned. It has been dubbed “flesh-eating” because the bloody-filled lesions destroy the skin. After a person gets infected, symptoms tend to appear one to 12 weeks later. Symptoms include painful genital ulcers that worsen and spread and often cause bleeding. If left untreated, the infection can start to destroy a person’s genital tissue and attack other parts of the body. Donovanosis is still extremely rare, with only 20 or 30 cases each year, and is more common in India, Brazil, New Guinea, South America, Southeast Asia central Australia, the Caribbean and southern Africa. According to data from Public Health England, there were only 30 reported cases of Donovanosis in the UK in 2019. That was up from 19 in 2016, 26 in 2017, and 21 in 2018. However in 2020 reported cases of Donovanosis dropped to 18.
www.foxnews.com...
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www.independent.co.uk...
originally posted by: BrujaRebooted
a reply to: andy06shake
You’d be a good judge of extreme nastiness, with that avatar of yours.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: Violater1
Well that sounds nasty in the extreme.
originally posted by: ScepticScot
originally posted by: Violater1
A sexually-transmitted disease called Donovanosis, that causes beefy red ‘flesh-eating’ genital ulcers, is becoming more common in the UK, a doctor has warned. It has been dubbed “flesh-eating” because the bloody-filled lesions destroy the skin. After a person gets infected, symptoms tend to appear one to 12 weeks later. Symptoms include painful genital ulcers that worsen and spread and often cause bleeding. If left untreated, the infection can start to destroy a person’s genital tissue and attack other parts of the body. Donovanosis is still extremely rare, with only 20 or 30 cases each year, and is more common in India, Brazil, New Guinea, South America, Southeast Asia central Australia, the Caribbean and southern Africa. According to data from Public Health England, there were only 30 reported cases of Donovanosis in the UK in 2019. That was up from 19 in 2016, 26 in 2017, and 21 in 2018. However in 2020 reported cases of Donovanosis dropped to 18.
www.foxnews.com...
www.forbes.com...
www.independent.co.uk...
Can we all agree that ''Pictures or it didn't happen' does not apply in this case.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: butcherguy
Raise the point with a mod then if you think my avatar is racist.