Condoms & Read Condom Reviews. Trojan, Durex, LifeStyles, Crown, Beyond Seven, Kimono, Inspiral - Free Shipping at CondomDepot.com

Topics

Buying Guides & How To  SexEd Buying Guide Feed

Return of the Durex Avanti Condom

We have received word from a source that the Durex Avanti is due to be released in March of 2009. The new Avanti product will no longer be made of Polyurethane instead being manufactured using Polyisoprene, the same material being used to manufacture the new

Crown Condoms Thailand & Japan What's The Deal

We received dozens of calls from customers about Crown Skinless Skin Condoms and the fact that the “New” Crown Condoms say made in “Thailand” and not made in “Japan” like previous versions.

Help in choosing the Right Snugger Fit Condom

I get asked the same question time and time again. "Which Condom is the best condom for a buddy of mine that is not so well endowed?" This is probably the most asked question i receive on a daily basis.

Choosing The Right Personal Lubricant

Many customers ask us about lubricants, which are best, which contain benzocaine, etc... Below is some info to help you find the right personal lubricant. Please Note: All lubes on our website are safe for use with condoms and toys unless otherwise noted.

    View More Guides »

Resource Links  Resource Links Feed

About Climax Control Condoms

"It's a tantra master wrapped in foil, the antidote to impatient passion. Two lines of "climax control" condoms that contain a mild anethetic, Benzocaine, promise men the sort of self-restraint that once required tantric meditation or at least a distracting thought or two during sex.

Durex Sex Survey
Who is Doing It and How Often: Although we don't recommend comparing your sex life to what others consider to be normal, it can be interesting to see how often other couples have intercourse.
HPV Information
Genital HPV infection is a sexually transmitted disease (STD) that is caused by human papillomavirus (HPV). Human papillomavirus is the name of a group of viruses that includes more than 100 different strains or types. More than 30 of these viruses are sexually transmitted, and they can infect the genital area of men and women including the skin of the penis, vulva (area outside the vagina), or anus, and the linings of the vagina, cervix, or rectum. Most people who become infected with HPV will not have any symptoms and will clear the infection on their own.
Center of Disease Control Male Latex Condom Fact Sheet
In June 2000, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), convened a workshop to evaluate the published evidence establishing the effectiveness of latex male condoms in preventing STDs, including HIV. A summary report from that workshop was completed in July 2001 (http://www.niaid.nih.gov/ dmid/stds/condomreport.pdf). This fact sheet is based on the NIH workshop report and additional studies that were not reviewed in that report or were published subsequent to the workshop (see link for additional references). Most epidemiologic studies comparing rates of STD transmission between condom users and non-users focus on penile-vaginal intercourse.
Condoms: Barriers to Bad News
What do condoms have in common with toothpaste and toilet paper?

Not enough, according to Adam Glickman, owner of the Condomania stores in New York and Los Angeles. Glickman, who has sold condoms by the millions to individuals and organizations such as the Peace Corps and Planned Parenthood, says condoms should be viewed as ordinary, like toothpaste and toilet paper. "People have gotten past asking, 'Isn't brushing my teeth every morning a hassle?' Given the world we live in, wearing condoms is something you just have to do, like brushing your teeth. The stakes are too high."

    View More Resource Articles »

Many Male Teens Fatalistic About Unplanned Pregnancy

    Posted by Condom Depot on 09/06/2005

TUESDAY Sept. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Most sexually active male American teens say they have no intention of getting a girl pregnant, but more than half also believe it is likely that they will do so within the next six months, a new study finds.

This fatalistic attitude "highlights the need to have a larger conversation about pregnancy, condom use, and what the barriers to condom use might be among male adolescents," said lead researcher Cynthia Rosengard, an assistant professor of medicine at Brown University School of Medicine in Providence, R.I. "We need to help them, so that their actions fall more in line with their plans."

TUESDAY Sept. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Most sexually active male American teens say they have no intention of getting a girl pregnant, but more than half also believe it is likely that they will do so within the next six months, a new study finds.

This fatalistic attitude "highlights the need to have a larger conversation about pregnancy, condom use, and what the barriers to condom use might be among male adolescents," said lead researcher Cynthia Rosengard, an assistant professor of medicine at Brown University School of Medicine in Providence, R.I. "We need to help them, so that their actions fall more in line with their plans."

According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit group focusing on reproductive health issues, by the time American teens reach age 17 most have already experienced intercourse. Institute data suggest that most young people start engaging in sexual relations at some point in their mid-to-late teens.

The institute also notes that although teen pregnancy rates dropped significantly in the 1990s, they remain much higher than those in other developed countries -- twice as high as in either Canada or England, and nine times higher than either the Netherlands or Japan. Nearly 80 percent of all teen pregnancies are unplanned -- accounting for an estimated 25 percent of all accidental pregnancies in the United States, according to the institute.

Reporting in the September issue of the journal Pediatrics, the study authors reviewed data from interviews with 101 sexually active teen males attending a sexually transmitted disease clinic in northern California between 1996 and 1998. The boys, aged 14 to 19, were questioned regarding their sexual attitudes and behaviors.

Forty-three percent of those interviewed were black, with white teens and Hispanics comprising another 15 percent each. About 11 percent of the teens were Asian.

While more than 75 percent of the male teens said they had no plans to get anyone pregnant over the next six months, more than 56 percent said there was nonetheless some likelihood they would do so whether or not this was their intention, the researchers report.

Almost 25 percent said they were both planning and likely to get someone pregnant, while 33 percent said the likelihood existed despite their lack of intention. Almost 43 percent said they neither planned nor thought it likely they would get someone pregnant.

Teens who thought they might get a partner pregnant in the near future also admitted to being less able to use condoms in "challenging situations." They also expressed less intention to use condoms in the future, compared with boys who believed they would not impregnate a girl.

Teens who actively planned on impregnating -- or thought they might do so accidentally -- tended to be less negative about pregnancy in general, and came from families with relatively less-educated mothers, the researchers added. Teen boys actively planning pregnancy also tended to subscribe to the notion that condom use undermined trust in a relationship.

The findings highlight the need to take young male viewpoints into account when tackling the issue of unplanned pregnancy, Rosengard said.

"Males inform how often intercourse takes place and whether or not condoms are used," said Rosengard. "Males can influence how the female feels about pregnancy, whether or not she'll have an abortion, and how the baby will be raised once it's born. And yet our work is one of the first of its kind because we focus on males, while most adolescent pregnancy work has focused only on females and their attitudes on pregnancy."

"The problem is that most male adolescents don't have discussions about reproductive health-care issues when they go to access health services," said Rosengard, who is also a researcher in internal medicine at Rhode Island Hospital. "So medical health-care professionals should be aware that that's something they should be talking about with their male patients -- not just their female patients."

David Landry, a senior research associate at the Alan Guttmacher Institute, agreed. He believes health-care professionals need to devote more time to frank discussions of reproductive issues with young males, instead of just handling crises as they arise.

"It's important that teens -- both male and female -- are empowered to feel that they have the right to discuss these issues with their doctor," he said. "And also -- in the U.S. as compared with many countries in Western Europe -- we struggle as a society with how to deal with issues of sexuality. So there's the issue of adults largely putting up barriers to discussions about sex."

But Landry said male teens face additional gender-specific obstacles.

"It's very apparent that health providers do not discuss the use of contraception with male adolescents too often," he noted. "In part I think this is due to the advances in contraception decades back, which gave females so much control over their own reproduction that the medical field and public health officials overstated the role of females and understated the role of males in pregnancy and STD prevention."

Nadine Kaslow, a professor and chief psychologist at the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, believes "it's really important that health-care providers discuss reproductive issues equally with male and female patients. It takes two to tango, and doctors definitely have a responsibility to bring up the issue -- to discuss condom use."

But Kaslow stressed that communication with male teens about reproductive health needs to be broadly based, including parents and teachers as well.

"Teachers and other community leaders can help with all this," she said. "And it's also important that parents do this. It's a family responsibility. Of course, a lot of families don't believe in pre-marital sex, and so even though they may know or fear their son is having sex, they think if they don't talk to him about it, it will go away. So parents need to think about their own value systems and what the reality is."


Keywords

Pregnancy, In The News, study, Planned Parenthood, ... [+]

Post A Comment

Fields marked with an asterisk* are required. All HTML will be removed. A valid email is required but will never be published.

  • 1 + 2 =

Other Recent Articles

Catering to stars at VMA awards » - Celebrities are notorious for demanding perks backstage -- and Sunday night's MTV Video Music Awards in Miami were no exception. Rapper 50 Cent's reps asked for two boxes of condoms, reports the New York Daily News, as well as the obligatory bottles of Cristal. When it came to food, however, his tastes were simpler: chicken from KFC and Boston Market, and mac and cheese.

« Ansell fails quality test; US bars its condoms - Ansell was barred from exporting condoms from its Thailand plant to the United States on Friday after the products failed to meet rigorous safety standards during a random inspection. The company subjects its condoms to internal water and electronic tests to ensure their quality, but the US Food & Drug Administration's even stricter examination revealed flaws.

| Home | Condoms | Condom Reviews | Personal Lubricant | Custom Condoms | Wholesale | Learning Center | About Us | Beyond Seven Condoms | Crown Condoms | Vibrating Rings | Large Condoms | Snugger Fit Condoms | LifeStyles Condoms | Trojan Condoms | Durex Condoms |

We accept all major credit cards!We accept PayPal!

Twitter   


Buy condoms online at The World's Largest Ccondom Store.
Durex, Trojan, LifeStyles, Kimono and all others at the lowest prices. Free USA Shipping.
Read condom reviews and buying guides at The Condom Depot.

Help Spread The Word! Download a Condom Depot Banner Ad Today!


Click Here >

Copyright © 1996 - 2010 Go Live, Inc. / Condom Depot. All rights reserved.
Tampa • Los Angeles • New York • Chicago