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Showing posts with label Condoms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Condoms. Show all posts

Long-Term Contraception Lagging as Sexually Active Singles Barred Access

Jakarta Globe, Dessy Sagita | September 28, 2010

Tania Widyaningsih is only 28 years old, but she already has three children and is expecting her fourth in about two months.

While condoms are available and are preferred for
 preventing sexually transmitted diseases, many
can’t access other birth control. (EPA Photo)   
She says she is aware of the contraception options available to her, including the permanent ones, but prefers the more traditional techniques of withdrawal, counting the days in her menstrual cycle, or using a condom.

She adds she once got an intrauterine contraceptive device (IUD), but stopped using it shortly after because she feared it would disrupt her menstrual cycle.

“I know a lot about contraception, but I miscarried twice before I had my first child, so having a lot of children is actually bliss for me,” Tania tells the Jakarta Globe.

Tania, who married at 20, says she frequently worries that she may not be able to provide her children with the proper care and attention, especially because she is a working mother.

“I’m not too worried for now because my children are still young, and our parents help us a lot, but I’m a little worried about their future,” she says.

Tania is not the only one, by far. Many Indonesians with a relatively high level of education don’t plan their families carefully, even though they know about contraception.

More than 90 percent of Indonesians say they fully understand the importance and benefits of contraception, yet only 64 percent use it, according to the National Family Planning Coordinating Board (BKKBN).

“That means almost 30 percent of those with knowledge about contraception don’t practice what they know, for various reasons,” says Sugiri Syarief, the BKKBN head.

Biran Affandi, country representative for the Asia-Pacific Council on Contraception (APCOC), says contraception is crucial not just for preventing unwanted pregnancies, but also protecting women from a gamut of menstruation-related ailments and dicomforts.

“Contraception, such as the pill, can shorten long periods and ease menstrual cramps,” he said at a press conference to mark World Contraception Day, which fell on Sept. 26.

“It can also reduce the risk of ovarian cancer and pelvic inflammation.”

Contraceptive pills contain hormones that prevent ovulation, thicken the cervical mucus — thus making it difficult for sperm to get through — and thin the lining of the womb, making it less receptive to eggs.

These pills are highly effective in preventing pregnancy, but must be taken daily at around the same time each day and are known for side effects that include weight gain and pimples — although this varies from person to person.

Biran, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Indonesia, says the number of people using contraception is not as high as it should be because many sexually active couples are not married.

By law, contraception may only be prescribed for married couples, says Setya Edi, the director of service and guarantee for the BKKBN’s contraception unit.

“For teens, we only provide information through peer trainers to prevent them from engaging in premarital sex,” he says.

Despite this, an estimated 63 percent of Indonesia’s 65 million teenagers are sexually active, according to a 2008 BKKBN study, with 21 percent of the girls having experienced an abortion.

The study also showed that 24 percent of teens who were sexually active understood about contraception but did not have access to it.

Biran says he has treated many pregnant teenagers who ran into medical complications because their bodies could not take the strain of being pregnant.

“It’d be ideal if we could stop them having sex, but if they’re doing it anyway, at least they should be safe,” he says.

Setya agrees that birth control and family planning programs could be the best solution for the country’s social and welfare problems.

“If the government was committed to implementing family planning programs, at least five of eight targets under the [UN-mandated] Millennium Development Goals would be achieved,” he says.

Firman Lubis, the chairman of Indonesia Health Coalition (KUIS), says the indicator of a nation’s health is determined by its maternal and infant mortality rates.

“Bringing down either parameter is highly dependent on the success of family planning programs,” he says.

“Contraception shouldn’t be a burden, it should be a necessity.”

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Young slum dwellers dislike using condom

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 04/22/2010 11:24 AM

The lack of information and knowledge about contraceptives has contributed to the common practice of unsafe sex among sexually active youth who live in poverty in Jakarta.

Many people who live in poverty have been said to believe that condom use decreases the experience of sexual activity.

Iqbal, 30, of Kampung Sepatan in Rorotan subdistrict, Cilincing, North Jakarta, said recently that many of the youth in the neighborhood had been in sexual relations and thought condom use could reduce a couple’s intimacy.

Kampung Sepatan is one of the urban slums in Jakarta and home to around 1,400 lower-income residents, many whose livelihood’s depend on trash picking, farming and fishing.

“Using a condom while having sex is not enjoyable,” Iqbal stated.

It was said that while young people there were aware of the dangers of practicing unsafe sex, there was a social propensity among them that championed unsafe sex as a way to cement a relationship.

“My ex-girlfriend insisted that we did not use condoms to hold me responsible if she became preg-nant,” Iqbal’s friend told the The Jakarta Post on condition of anonymity, adding that using condoms in a relationship also symbolized a lack of trust.

Sex education among the youth in the neighborhood appears to lack.

Reportedly many NGOs visiting the area are focused on providing young residents with more assistance with food, clothing and vocational training.

“No NGOs that have visited have provided sex education,” Adi, 20, said.

He said they received sex education from their schools in biology class, which consisted of information about their reproductive organs and function.

Similar to their counterparts in Kampung Sepatan, the young people living along Ciliwung riverbank of Bukit Duri and Kampung Pulo subdistricts, South Jakarta, also agreed that unprotected sex was a strategy to find love.

A young woman said, “I’d rather have sex without using condoms because it’s a symbol of intimacy and trust”.

Unprotected sex is a way in which a woman can ensure her boyfriend remains loyal, she said.

Zaky, 19, told the Post that they had better more informed and became aware of the dangers of unprotected sex after several NGOs recently visited their area to educate them about sex.

However, NGOs did not discuss the importance of using condoms, despite the fact that many young people there were sexually active.

“The NGOs explained the dangers of HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections [STIs], but not about contraception in detail,” Zaky said.

The Lamp Science Foundation (YPI), a grassroot organization active in promoting the awareness on HIV/AIDS, confirmed that its approaches to young people in lower-income urban areas had been proactive in educating them about reproductive health, STIs and HIV/AIDS prevention.

“We highlighted condom use as one way to reduce the risk of HIV infection,” YPI secretary Srisulistyurini said.

She said that premarital and unsafe sex was prevalent among the youth in shanty areas, and that sex education was the key to curbing the rapid spread of STIs and HIV/AIDS.

The YPI suggested that communities of slum areas in Jakarta should initiate workshops on sex education by requesting NGOs such as the YPI to visit their areas.

“It needs comprehensive participation from society because many NGOs don’t have the resources to map all the slum areas in the city whose young residents need sex education,” Srisulistyurini said.

According to the health agency, 3,863 AIDS cases were reported in 2009, with women and young people being the most prone to infection. (tsy)

Sex education among the youth in the neighborhood appears to lack.

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Anti-rape condom ready for SA World Cup

Radio Netherlands Worldwide, 13 April 2010 - 7:36pm

The Rape-aXe (Photo: Rape-aXe)

A South African doctor wants to distribute 30,000 free anti-rape condoms for women ahead of the football World Cup. Dr Sonnet Ehlers first developed the special condom five years ago and says it is now ready for widespread use.

The Rape-aXe, as it is called, is a condom women can insert themselves. The interior has tiny spines which, in case of rape, attach to the man's penis.

Dr Ehlers emphasizes that they do not draw blood, since this would increase the danger of HIV infection. However, they do cause a great deal of pain if the man tries to remove the condom. The condom has to be removed in hospital, she says, which means the rapist can immediately be arrested.

Critics argue that the Rape-aXe could work as a provocation and the rapist is likely to become more violent when he realises he has been trapped.

The anti-rape condom is not yet available in the shops in South Africa and has not yet been tried out on test subjects.

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Size Does Matter For Condom Users: Researchers

Jakarta Globe, February 16, 2010

An Indonesian health officer shows a range of condoms during an anti-HIV/AIDS campaign in Jakarta. (EPA Photo/Bagus Indahono)

A large minority of male condom users complain that ill-fitting prophylactics are liable to split and break during intercourse and be a sexual turnoff, researchers said on Tuesday.

US investigators analysed questionnaires completed by 436 men between the ages of 18 and 67 who had been recruited via ads in newspapers and a blog on the website of a condom sales company.

The volunteers had used condoms for vaginal intercourse in the previous three months.

A remarkable 44.7 percent of the respondents said they had experiences of condoms that were ill-fitting, the doctors found.

Poorly-fitting condoms more than doubled the risk of breakage, slippage, erection loss and difficulty in reaching an orgasm, either by the user or his partner. They were also five times likelier to cause irritation of the penis.

Such problems prompted many users to remove the condom before intercourse ended — a worrying phenomenon in the fight against unwanted pregnancies and sexually-transmitted disease.

The work is reported online by the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections, published by the British Medical Association (BMA).

The researchers, led by Richard Crosby and Bill Yarber at the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction in Indiana, acknowledge that the study may have been limited by self-reported data.

Even so, the evidence highlights some worrying problems about the use of condoms, especially as a barrier to sexual pleasure, which made using it a real deterrent for some.

It also shows the need for “public health messages” to enjoin men to get the right size of condom, they said.

On this point, men — and condom manufacturers — will have to deal with the delicate question of penis size, say the authors.

For one thing, widespread pornography may have distorted the male self-image, making it harder for some men to accept that they have a less than gigantic member.

“The old saying is, women don’t have penis envy, men do,” Yarber said.

Condom makers would be advised to start calling their smallest size “large”, and then move on to “extra large” for medium size and so on, he suggested in a podcast (http://podcast.bmj.com/sti).

“Certainly, don’t label them as large, medium or extra small,” he said wryly.

AFP

Related Article:

Men 'need better-fitting condoms'


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Five-day limit for post-sex pill

The contraceptive is available only on prescription

A recently licensed type of emergency contraception may offer women protection from pregnancy even when taken five days after sex.

Scottish researchers found that ulipristal acetate worked well after the three-day limit of the most commonly used drug, levonorgestrel.

At present ulipristal - unlike levonorgestrel - is only available with a prescription.

The British Pregnancy Advisory Service welcomed the study.

Emergency contraception uses hormones to either prevent the release of an egg by the ovary in the hours after sex, or stop it implanting into the the womb.

Levonorgestrel is available from pharmacies, either with a prescription, or sold directly to over-16s.

A study by specialists working for NHS Lothian tested the effectiveness of levonorgestrel and ulipristal (which was licensed for use last year) using a sample of more than 1,600 women from the UK, Ireland and the USA.

A total of 2.6% of the levonorgestrel group became pregnant despite taking the drug, compared with 1.8% in the ulipristal group.

In a much smaller group of women who received emergency contraception more than three days after sex, there were no pregnancies among women who had taken ulipristal compared with three pregnancies among those taking levonorgestrel.

The levels of side effects were roughly the same in both two drugs.

'Time window'

However, researchers said that the newer drug cannot be sold 'over-the-counter' at pharmacies because it did not yet have the established safety record of levonorgestrel.

Ann Furedi, chief executive of the British Pregnancy Advisory Service described the new type of drug as "exciting news".

She said: "It offers a longer time window for use than the traditional, emergency contraception pill.

"Different hormones are involved to the ones traditionally used in contraception, so it may be that these will prove to have other contraceptive uses in future.

"However, accessibility is key to the uptake of any time-sensitive medication and since this pill is not currently available over-the-counter and is significantly more expensive to buy than the traditional 'morning after pill', it may be that many women who could benefit from it are not able to access it."


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