Giving a person a medication without their knowledge is illegal and constitutes assault. It is dangerous, as some chlamydia medications can have fatal drug interactions if mixed with the wrong medications. It is unethical, as the person has the right to know they were exposed to an infection. It is ineffective, as your local Department of Health will likely to contact tracing to let them know that they were exposed.
Perhaps you made a mistake and are embarrassed to say that you exposed your partner to chlamydia. That is a common concern and fear. Do the right, legal, safe thing and give them the opportunity to get effective diagnosis and treatment.
There are various medications used to treat chlamydia. These were developed at various times. None was developed specifically to treat chlamydia.
Rocephin is an injection used to treat gonorrhea. Chlamydia is not treated with injections.
Isoniazid or INH is an antitubercular medication and does not treat chlamydia.
Saw palmetto does not treat chlamydia. See your health care provider for accurate diagnosis and effective treatment with antibiotics.
Hydrochlortothiazide is a diuretic, not an antibiotic. It will not treat chlamydia or any other infection.
No, cefditoren pivoxil (brand name Spectracef) will not treat chlamydia.
It is sometimes used to treat chlamydia. After taking it, get re-tested and confirm you are no longer infected.
Mefloquine is an antiprotozoal, and does not treat bacterial infections. It will not cure chlamydia.
Azithromycin powder in a 1g dose is sometimes used to treat chlamydia.
Diclofenac (brand name Diclofelx) is an anti-inflammatory, not an antibiotic. It will not cure chlamydia nor any other infection.
Talk to a guidance counselor, therapist, friends, whomever you feel you can trust.
Chlamydia does not cause sores. See your health care provider for accurate diagnosis and effective treatment.