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The female condom - the step-child in HIV prevention
PLUS News
August 07, 2008
http://www.plusnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=79699
The female condom
- currently the only female-controlled method of preventing HIV
- is rarely available to women who need it. Blaming poor marketing
and insufficient investment, activists at the International AIDS
Conference in Mexico City said failure to promote the female condom
had hurt global HIV prevention efforts.
"When the
female condom first came to us, it was marketed to sex workers,
women in bars, and other women thought to be at high risk of HIV
or to have loose morals," said Gladys Chiwome, of Zimbabwe's
Women and AIDS
Support Network, which promotes the use of the female condom
in the southern African nation. "As a result, women who thought
they were safe, such as married women, were, and still are, reluctant
to use it."
Farah Karimi,
director of Oxfam-Novib, the Dutch arm of the UK-based international
charity, told a press conference that 28 million female condoms
were distributed worldwide in 2007, compared with 11 billion male
condoms. The unit cost of a female condom, she added, was 18 times
higher than that of the male condom.
"Even here
at the conference, the bag supplied by the conference organisers
to all delegates contained five male condoms but only one female
condom," she said.
While policy
makers and donors continued to believe that lack of investment in
the female condom was driven by low demand, Karimi said the reverse
was true: if more governments bought more female condoms, promoted
more female condom programmes, and invested more in the development
of a lower-cost version of the prophylactic, demand would shoot
up.
"The male
condom was promoted so hard in advertising, through school education
and advocacy - we need the same effort for the female condom,"
she said.
According to
Chiwome, lack of access to female condoms meant that women were
sometimes advised to wash and re-use them, a practice that had worrying
implications for health and hygiene, particularly in rural areas
where clean water was not readily available.
The few women
in Zimbabwe who had managed to get their hands on female condoms
had expressed satisfaction with it. "They have felt more confident,
assertive and fulfilled in their sexuality," Chiwome said.
In a society
where gender power dynamics often give women little say in their
sexual relationships, Chiwome pointed out the need to equip women,
not only with female condoms, but with the skills to negotiate their
use.
"Girls
and women need the skills to say, 'if you're not going to use yours
then I'm going to use mine' to their sexual partners," agreed
Mary Robinson, former President of the Republic of Ireland and honorary
president of Oxfam International.
Describing the
provision of an affordable and easily accessible female condom to
women as a human rights issue, Robinson said: "It is about
the right for women to have access to protection and their right
to make choices for themselves. Schools should be teaching boys
and girls about the female condom but, sadly, most of them are not."
Karimi said,
"Investment in prevention for women is focused on vaccines
and microbicides, which are not available now and may not be available
for several years. Women cannot wait for them - they need
protection now."
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