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Sexual Health Testing

  • May 15
  • 5 min read

Updated: May 20

Where, when, how and why get sexual health testing?


Regular and comprehensive Sexual Health Screening should be incorporated into a healthy sex life. However, for many people, contemplating a sexual health screening fills them with anxiety, shame and embarrassment. Some women like to think of it similarly to the other preventative health testing women can have - a mammogram for breast cancer, a Pap smear for cervical health, blood checks for cholesterol levels- an STI test isn't so different as it's all designed to help save your health and your life.


Many STIs are not symptomatic and can lie within the body for years without you being aware. Long-term health impacts of untreated STIs can vary, but women's reproductive health is far more likely to be impacted by untreated STIs. We know from supporting many Women Partners clients to take control of their sexual health that it is an empowering step in the healing journey of betrayal and infidelity. Please read more Blood born viruses, Bacterial STIs, Viral STIs  for further information on differing types of STIs.


Why should I test?

Women (cis and trans) are at risk of HIV transmission within NSW (1), and if your male partner is having sex with other men and not engaging in safe sex and transmission prevention (including condom usage or PrEP), then their female partners can be at risk of HIV transmission. Read below to understand further about where, how, and why to have regular STI/HIV testing.


People at risk of HIV can get tested confidentially and easily at their local GP service. GPs can also provide complete screening for all sexually transmitted infections (STIs), cervical screening, contraception, PrEP and other services. Please check whether your GP provides bulk billing to cover testing and other costs.


How to have an STI test?  

NSW Health's Play Safe website has released a comprehensive website discussing the most common STIs, including whether they are symptomatic or not, and where to get tested. More information can be found here, including a 30 second quiz to identify if you may be at risk of an STI transmission.


Let's talk about what STI testing includes, so that you can anticipate what may be asked of you, and to ensure you have received comprehensive STI/HIV testing.

  • Blood tests are required for HIV, syphilis, Hepatitis B and C

  • Urine tests are required for Chlamydia and gonorrhoea

  • Swabs can occur depending on site of sexual acts       


How does a GP or Sexual Heath Practitioners work out what type of test I need? 

Medical professionals will need to ask you questions to understand the potential STIs or HIV that you may have been exposed to, which informs them as to which tests to prescribe for you. These questions may feel embarrassing or invasive, but they are designed to ensure you receive comprehensive Sexual Health testing.

Questions can include: 

  • Are you sexually active?

  • What is the gender identity of the person/people you have had sex with?

  • Do you have oral sex, vaginal sex and/or anal sex?

  • What medication do you take?

  • Do you have any symptoms that you are concerned about?

  • When was the last time you had sex?

  • Have you ever been diagnosed with (or thought you had) an STI?

  • Have you had a new partner recently?

  • Do you use any contraception/condoms?



 When should I test for STIs/HIV (2,3)?

If it's been more than 12 months since your last test, and you can answer yes to any of the following questions, then you should get a comprehensive sexual health test as soon as possible:

  • Have you had sex – anal, vaginal or oral - with someone who is HIV/STI positive?

  • Have you had more than one sexual partner since your last test?

  • Are you a man who has had sex with another man?

  • Are you a woman whose male partner is having sex with men?

  • Have you injected drugs and shared needles, syringes, or other injection drug equipment with others?

  • Have you been diagnosed with, or treated for, another sexually transmitted infection?

  • Have you been diagnosed with or treated for hepatitis or tuberculosis (TB)?

  • Have you had sex with someone who could answer "yes" to any of the above questions or someone whose sexual history you don't know?

  • If you are pregnant, or trying to fall pregnant

  • If you are symptomatic for an STI

  • Used a condom but you think it fell or, or broke during sex


Where can I get tested?

NSW Health Sexual Health statewide clinics provide free, confidential and specialised sexual health care, including screening, education and counselling, for all priority populations, including those without Medicare. Not all clinics allow walk-ins, so calling ahead to make a booking can be very helpful.


When ringing a publicly funded Sexual Health clinic, the clinician will do a brief assessment over the phone, including asking questions about sexual practices, risk categories, and whether you have symptoms, so it is important to identify as a sexual partner of a Man who has Sex with Men to support your eligibility for service provision. Sometimes there can be barriers to women accessing sexual health testing and Women Partners have found that saying "My male partner is having sex with other men, as well as me, and I believe I may be at risk of STI/HIV transmission and would like a comprehensive Sexual Health test as a result" can reduce these barriers.


Other services that provide HIV/STI screening and other health care include:


Online Testing – HIV specific

Dry Blood Spot (DBS) - Free HIV & Hepatitis C test delivered to your home. Available in NSW only.

Rapid HIV home testing kit - for a cost, available across Australia

Free HIV vending machine tests - available in certain locations around Sydney

Stigma Health - online STI/HIV testing portal. Scripts are sent to your phone; you present to a pathology lab for testing, and a Stigma doctor reviews the results before online treatment options are provided to you. This can be an option if you do not have any symptoms, however, as advised by Women Partners medical professionals, if you have any symptoms including e.g. vaginal discharge, dysuria, pain during sex, genital sores/rashes, swollen lymph nodes particularly in the groin area, pelvic pain, please consult a GP or Sexual Health Clinic in person.


Women Partners are here to support you through the journey of taking back control of your Sexual Health from knowing from where to get tested including at women’s health centres, publicly funded sexual health clinics and at your GP.  Contact Women Partners for support regarding Sexual Health support.

  1. Australian Government. Ninth National HIV Strategy 2024-2030. Department of Health and Aged Care. 2024. Available from: https://www.health.gov.au/resources/publications/ninth-national-hiv-strategy-2024-2030?language=enMinistry of Health

  2. Australian Government. Testing for Sexually Transmissible Infections.  Department of Health, Disability and Ageing. 2025 (cited 2026). Available from: https://www.health.gov.au/sti/testing?language=en

  3. Positive Life NSW. Do I need to get tested for HIV? 2026. Available from: https://www.positivelife.org.au/latest-news/do-i-need-to-get-tested-for-hiv/10396/


 
 
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