Access
full C.E. document »
WARNING:
In order to completely and accurately describe the subject matter,
this document contains explicit information about human sexuality
which is not appropriate for minors or for persons who are morally
vulnerable to such material.
Table
of Contents:
Sources of Information
Introduction: Basic Concepts
............The Underlying Problem
............Types of Condoms
............Definition of Terms
The Primary Danger -- Not Pores, But Catastrophic Failure
............Overview
............The Studies
Condoms and Leakage
............The Primary Point to Remember
............A Complicated Question
............An Engineering Analysis of an SEM Image
Condoms and the Prevention of Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Teenagers and Condoms
............The New York Times Speaks
............Rebuttal by the Alan Guttmacher Institute
............Results of School Condom Studies
International Case Studies Showing Condom Ineffectiveness Against
HIV/AIDS
............Uganda
The Philippines and Thailand
............`Abstinence has a High Failure Rate’
............They Simply Refuse to “Get It”
............Lying in Order to Sell Condoms
Conclusion: Of Parachutes and Prophylactics
............The Family Planners `Speak’
Recommended Reading on Condoms
Endnotes
Sources
of Information.
This document
is a compendium and summary of the latest scientific information
about the most widely-used contraceptive device in the world today
-- the male condom. This summary draws from many sources, but focuses
primarily on medical journals.
This summary is intended to be a resource for those who need straightforward,
simple and concise facts about condoms.
Further pro-life sources of information on condoms, readily available
on the Internet, are listed at the end of this document.
For further information, please contact Human Life International,
4 Family Life, Front Royal, Virginia 22630, U.S.A., e-mail address:
hli@hli.org, Web site: http://www.hli.org, telephone: (540) 635-7884
or 1-(800) 549-LIFE.
Introduction:
Basic Concepts.
The
Underlying Problem. It is common knowledge among health
professionals that sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), some of
which are incurable and/or fatal, have found fertile ground to multiply
in societies that permit and even celebrate all forms of permissive
sex. Unfortunately, most people, for fear of appearing “backwards”
or “repressive,” treat this glaringly obvious fact like
a basilisk -- they dare not look at it or even speak about it.
The response
of most `developed’ world governments at every level, and
the reaction of various social service agencies to this explosion
of STDs, was as predictable as it was pitiful: They took the inherently
Humanistic position that Americans (not just teenagers) are mere
animals. Since they can’t be trusted to control their sexual
urges, we might as well make it as safe for them as possible to
have sex with whomever they please.
The government’s
weapons of choice were not chastity and monogamy, but `education’
and condoms. Even Bill Clinton’s Surgeon General, Joycelyn
Elders, sported a “rubber tree” on her desk -- festooned,
of course, with condoms.
And so, with
intriguing names like “Arouse,” “Embrace,”
“Excita,” and “Pleaser,” condoms crowd pharmacy
shelves and restroom walls, leering at potential users and proclaiming
the merits of “family planning” and “safe sex”
on their vividly colored packages.
Unfortunately,
members of the public uncritically accept the government and the
condom manufacturers at their word. And nobody (except a few pro
lifers, who are universally ignored) seems to be asking the most
vital question of all.
If condoms are
so effective at preventing pregnancy and AIDS transmission, why
do nations that stress their use continue to experience a rapidly
escalating rate of teen pregnancy and an exploding AIDS epidemic?
Due to the highly
charged aspects of the issues related to contraception (i.e., school
based clinics, the teen pregnancy “epidemic,” and the
spread of AIDS), there is much conflicting information on the effectiveness
of the most commonly used nonpermanent true contraceptive method
in the world the male condom at preventing pregnancy, AIDS, and
sexually transmitted diseases.
In order to
conduct an intelligent conversation on this topic, we must first
review a few basic facts.
Types
of Condoms. Three types of male condoms are commonly available
today;
- By far the
most commonly used condoms are made from natural rubber latex.
These are the most effective at preventing pregnancy and STDs,
and make up about 97 percent of all condom sales in the United
States.
- A small number
of condoms are made from the intestinal caecum of lambs, and are
called “natural skin,” “natural membrane”
or “lambskin” condoms. Experts generally agree that
skin condoms are not effective as latex condoms at preventing
AIDS and STDs.
- A third type,
generally becoming more available, are the condoms made from synthetic
materials including polyurethane. These are more resistant to
deterioration than latex condoms and are generally believed to
provide a similar level of protection against pregnancy and STDs
[1].
Definition
of Terms. The book Contraceptive Technology is the most
authoritative source of information on all methods of birth control
in the world today. This two-inch thick book is often referred to
as the “family planner’s bible,” and is revised
every few years in order to include updated information. The latest
edition was published in 2004, and it is considered by family planners
to be the “last word” on all matters contraceptive.
Family planners
use four terms when referring to the failure rate of a contraceptive
or abortifacient method;
- The “efficacy”
of a birth control method refers to the protection its users receive
under ideal conditions.
- The “effectiveness”
of a method refers to the protection its users receive under actual
conditions of use, and includes user error.
- The “method
failure rate” refers to malfunctions of the method itself
when a couple use it perfectly. For condoms, the method failure
rate is two percent. This does not mean that two percent of condom
uses will result in pregnancy. It means that, if there are one
hundred couples that use a condom perfectly over an entire year
of use, only two will experience pregnancy. Since the average
couple in the United States has sexual intercourse 83 times a
year, this means that, among one hundred perfect method users,
there will be two pregnancies for every 8,300 uses of the condom.
- The “user
failure rate” reflects not perfect use, but typical use,
and includes all user errors. According to Contraceptive Technology,
15 of 100 typical condom-using couples will experience pregnancy
within the first year of use.[2]
The basic problem
is as follows. No matter how much `safe(r) sex’ education
is taught, no matter how many bowls of free condoms are left in
plain view, and no matter how much contraceptive marketing is propagated,
there are a number of mechanical and human factors that simply cannot
be controlled [3];
- Condoms break
and slip off;
- They age.
One study found that the breakage rate for condoms increased from
3.6% for new condoms to as high as 18.6% for condoms several years
old.[4]
- They deteriorate
in even the best of conditions, but even more rapidly in extremely
cold or hot situations. Condom wrappers recommend storing the
product at temperatures between 59 and 88 degrees Fahrenheit.
One researcher found that, at major condom distribution points
in New Jersey and New York, boxes of condoms were left outdoors
in the ice and snow during the dead of winter. During the summer
months, the researcher took photographs of eggs frying on the
floors of dozens of trucks and containers where condoms were stored
in temperatures exceeding 180 degrees.[5] High temperatures cause
oxidation and freezing temperatures cause crystallization in some
of the chemical compounds that make up condoms, leading to cracking,
drying, shrinking and drastic loss of flexibility and strength.
Keep in mind that condoms exported from the United States sit
in uninsulated shipping containers in extreme weather conditions
for even longer periods of time;
- If taken
out of the package and left unused for a long period of time,
they are liable to ozone deterioration, which causes damage invisible
to the eye;
- Improper
use of oil-based lubricants can degrade them;
- They get
broken in their packages;
- They have
allowed rates of manufacturing defects. The present acceptable
quality limit (AQL) for North American condom manufacturers is
99.6% of condoms free of leaks. The British AQL is 97%, and the
Dutch AQL is 96.5%;
- The users
are caught up in passion and do not properly follow the ten- to
sixteen-step process for safe usage [6];
- The users
are compromised by the use of alcohol, marijuana, illegal drugs,
prescription and over-the-counter drugs, or exhaustion; and
- Bodily secretions
can get around and over a condom even if it performs perfectly.
The
Primary Danger -- Not Pores, But Catastrophic Failure.
“Counting
on condoms is flirting with death.”
Dr. Helen Singer Kaplan, founder of the Human Sexuality Program
at the New York Weill Cornell Medical Center, Cornell University.[7]
Overview.
Although latex
condoms appear to occasionally be permeable to the AIDS virus, by
far the greatest danger of infection lies in their propensity to
burst, tear and slip off.
Even if only
a few HIV viruses did pass through a porous condom, the risk of
infection would still be extremely small; but in those cases where
condoms fail catastrophically, massive exposure to the HIV virus
is inevitable. In cases of failure during intercourse with an HIV
infected person, there is the distinct possibility of a protracted
and extremely unpleasant death.
The Studies.
The frequency of condom breakage depends upon many factors, including
the type of lubricant used and the brand of condom. Contraceptive
Technology tallied the results of fifteen studies involving a total
of 25,184 condoms used during heterosexual intercourse and found
that 4.64 percent of all of the condoms broke and 3.44 percent of
them partially or completely slipped off, for a total of 8.08 percent,
or about one in twelve.[8]
Figure 1 is
a summary of these studies.
Summary
of Studies:
- Average breakage
rate of all condoms:
1,168/25,184 = 4.64%
- Average slippage
rate of all condoms:
636/18,495 = 3.44%
- Total failure
rate of all condoms: 8.08%
Click
here for the full document »
|