Syphilis Rates Drop 18.6%, Congenital Syphilis Down 32.4% in New Mexico
Summary
The New Mexico Department of Health announced declines in sexually transmitted infection rates for 2025 compared to 2024. Syphilis rates dropped 18.6%, congenital syphilis fell 32.4%, chlamydia dropped 5.1%, and gonorrhea dropped 6.1%. NMDOH attributes the declines to expanded community outreach, increased testing and treatment, promotion of Doxy PEP post-exposure prevention medication, and partnerships with community, medical, and Tribal organizations.
What changed
The New Mexico Department of Health announced positive STI statistics for 2025 compared to 2024, marking STI Awareness Week. The declines are attributed to expanded community outreach, increased testing and treatment, Doxy PEP promotion, and partnerships with community organizations.
Healthcare providers can direct patients to free testing and prevention resources including state public health offices, the NMDOH Nurse Helpline, and online resources. The announcement is informational and does not create new regulatory obligations.
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- Monitor for updates
Archived snapshot
Apr 15, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Sexually transmitted infections decline
April 15, 2026 - Sexually Transmitted Diseases - Awareness
SANTA FE – Syphilis rates in New Mexico fell 18.6% and congenital syphilis rates dropped 32.4% from 2024 to 2025, the New Mexico Department of Health (NMDOH) announced this week as the state marks STI Awareness Week.
Congenital syphilis — a serious and preventable condition in which syphilis is transmitted from mother to newborn — has been a persistent public health challenge nationally. New Mexico's nearly one-third reduction in one year marks significant progress. Chlamydia rates dropped 5.1% and gonorrhea rates dropped 6.1% over the same period. These encouraging declines speak to how sustained, targeted interventions can make a difference.
NMDOH attributes the declines to expanded community outreach, increasing testing and treatment, promoting the use of Doxy PEP—a medication taken after unprotected sex to reduce STI risk (post-exposure prevention medication) — and partnerships with community, medical and Tribal organizations.
“STIs don’t always cause symptoms which is why getting an STI test is important if you are sexually active,” said Janine Waters, STD Program Manager for NMDOH. “All STIs are preventable and treatable, and most are curable. New Mexicans can contact their local public health office for free testing and treatment.”
How to protect yourself:
- Use condoms the right way every time you have sex. Use a new condom, consistently and correctly, for every act of vaginal, anal, and oral sex throughout the entire sex act.
- Get vaccinated – hepatitis B and HPV can be prevented with a vaccine.
- Talk to your healthcare provider about Doxy PEP, a medicine taken after unprotected sex to reduce your chance of getting an STI.
- Have an honest talk with your healthcare provider and ask whether you should be tested for STIs and HIV.
- PrEP – Medicine taken before you might be exposed to HIV through sex or a needle sharing partner. Contact your local public health office for no-cost medication.
Resources available for people who want to prevent or treat STIs include:
- State public health offices provide free STI testing and treatment as well as PrEp and Doxy PEP.
- The NMDOH Nurse Helpline prescribes no cost PrEP and Doxy PEP medications for HIV and STI prevention. Call 833-796-8773 or text NMDOH (66364). The Helpline also connects clients to services and is a resource for clinicians.
- www.nmstdtest.org helps you find testing services and treatment options.
- Take Me Home is an organization that enables free, discreet, and in-home sexual health tests, as well as basic support sources following a possible positive result.
More information on STIs can be found through the CDC and on nmhealth.org.
Media Contact
We would be happy to provide additional information about this press release. Simply contact Robert Nott at (Office) with your questions.
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