MEXICO CITY -- It has been 15 years since the female condom was unveiled, but the anniversary is an inauspicious one. Once touted as a key tool in the fight against HIV-AIDS, a way of empowering women whose partners shun traditional condoms, the female condom has largely been forgotten.The fault lies not with the product itself but with set-in-their-ways policy makers, the international aid group Oxfam said in a scathing new report."This is a 15-year scandal born of ignorance and inertia," said Mary Robinson, Oxfam's honorary president. "We now know that millions of women might have been spared HIV and unwanted pregnancies, and (could have) empowered themselves in the process, if they had access to this simple method."Robinson, former U.N. high commissioner for human rights, said female condoms should be an integral part of HIV-AIDS and family-planning programs, and promoted as aggressively as male condoms.A female condom is a lubricated polyurethane sheath inserted into the vagina before intercourse.The main barrier to its use is cost, said Carlos Zarco, director of the Mexican AIDS group Rostros y Voces."The female condom is 18 times more expensive than a male condom. It's obvious why women are not using it more," he said.Male condoms cost pennies and, in much of the world, they are distributed widely and for free as part of HIV-AIDS-prevention programs.According to the 33-page Oxfam report, titled "Failing Women, Withholding Protection," studies have repeatedly shown that female condoms are widely accepted and many women actually prefer them to male condoms.There are about 3 billion male condoms sold worldwide each year, compared with 26 million female condoms, a ratio of 423:1.The charitable group PATH has spent about $5.6 million developing a female condom that has a tamponlike capsule for easy insertion of a polyurethane pouch that is kept in place by dots of foam.According to the Oxfam report, an additional $20 million investment would result in the two newer models being brought to market quickly and the competition would sharply lower prices.(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
Latest Stories
By MICK LASALLE, San Francisco Chronicle
By LESLEY CARLIN, TripAdvisor.com
By GRETCHEN McKAY, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By GRETCHEN McKAY, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By DANIEL NEMAN, Toledo Blade
By PETER HECHT, Sacramento Bee
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By BARBARA BRADLEY, Scripps Howard News Service
By STEVE BUCCI, bankrate.com
By JANET K. KEELER, Tampa Bay Times
By DAN K. THOMASSON, Scripps Howard News Service
By CAROLYN SAID, San Francisco Chronicle
By DAVID R. BAKKER, San Francisco Chronicle
By LEE DAVIDSON, Salt Lake Tribune
By JIM ALEXANDER, The Press-Enterprise
By DAVID MOULTON , Scripps Howard News Service
By ISADORA RANGEL, Scripps Howard News Service
By LUKE DeCOCK, Raleigh News and Observer
By SCOTT OSTLER, San Francisco Chronicle
By HELAINE FENDELMAN and JOE ROSSON, Scripps Howard News Service
- 1 of 2394
- ››
Lack of access to female condoms vilified
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




ShareThis





