Hey Alana, how
about condoms for your cables?
And we also asked Ney
about condoms for all the practical reasons.
Not exact matches
For decades, men have had only two ways to actively avoid impregnating a partner: wear a
condom (which are
about 85 % effective) or get a vasectomy.
Based on some of the arguments Grossman made
about how administrative efforts to prevent sexually transmitted disease actually lead to more sexual activity, more disease, and more psychological distress, Nava penned an op / ed
for the Daily Princetonian questioning the campus's programs on
condom distribution and sexual health titled «Princeton's Latex Lies.»
@catholics: if you don't like the contriseptive / abortion issue, pray
about it... but
for crying out loud don't get angry when my atheist son gets your daughter pregnant because she tells him it's against her religion to use
condoms.
Examples are 9/11 hijackings, The holding back of stem cell research that could save countless human lives, Aids being spread due to religious opposition to the use of
condoms, Christians legally fighting this year to teach over 1 million young girls in America that they must always be obedient to men, the eroding of child protection laws in America by Christians,
for so called faith based healing alternatives that place children's health and safety at risk, burning of witches, the crusades, The Nazi belief that the Aryans were god's chosen to rule the world, etc... But who cares
about evidence in the real world when we have our imaginations and delusions
about gods with no evidence of them existing.
While many people have expressed reservations
about the direction of the Clinton economic program, the good economic news is that retail
condom sales broke the $ 300 million dollar mark
for 1993.
As
for lies
about condoms — your pope claimed that use of
condoms in Africa would make the AIDS crisis worse.
They surely know
about safe sex,
for as Magic Johnson and others have pointed out, one of the side benefits of his announcement is the public attention now given to the use of
condoms.
Agents of the state can teach your children how to have sex, give them
condoms, put them on the pill, give them the morning - after pill if it doesn't work, and take them off
for an abortion if that fails - and all without you having any say in the matter or necessarily even knowing
about it.
We needed someone who could answer off the cuff the detailed attacks made on Church history and policy: opposition to the use of
condoms to combat AIDS, magisterial teaching
about homosexuality; the Church's historical attitude to slavery, involvement in the crusades, relations with the Jewish people; someone who could properly confront and contextualise the evil actions of some members of the Church - in Ireland or Rwanda,
for example.
But the Pope's remarks
about condoms to Peter Seewald
for his book The Light of the World - naughtily leaked out of context and without commentary by the Osservatore Romano - surely produced the most dramatic example of this phenomenon
for many years.
Some conservative Christians have vigorously, even viciously, denounded fellow evangelical Surgeon General C. Everett Koop
for suggesting advertisements and education
about condoms in the battle against AIDS.
«There were also complaints
about their priest's refusal to support Cafod [this, Fr Finigan explains, is because of Cafod's support
for condoms as a means of combating HIV], his expenditure on traditional vestments and other clerical garb, the absence of a parish council and failure to account to parishioners how money from the collection plate was being spent» [in other words, possible corruption]
And also, it's more common
for parents to only talk to boys
about sex and plumbing and STDs and
condoms.
After all, what would seem to be the best way to keep a teenager from getting pregnant — asking them to use short - term birth control via
condoms, taking the pill everyday, or ineffective pleas
for abstinence, or would it be better to give them an IUD that they don't have to think
about and is 99 % effective
for the next few years?
In short, I guess I am accusing certain elements of the mainstream media of using arguments
about press freedom, liberty, and Bernstein and Woodward as an excuse
for allowing the bin - rifling
condom - sniffers and aggressive paparazzi to continue their trade in order to make a quick buck.
Although limited by differences in the quality of the studies included in this review, these findings have important implications: they suggest that women living in regions where HIV infection is common should be offered repeat HIV testing during pregnancy and in the postpartum period to detect incident HIV infections, and that preventing HIV transmission during pregnancy and the postpartum period should be prioritized,
for example, by counseling women
about the need to use
condoms to prevent transmission during this period of their lives.
Dr. Gunter is also skeptical
about Dr. Ney's advice to look
for a «vegan, paraben - free, glycerin - free, Nonoxynal -9-free, and benzocaine - and lidocaine - free
condom.»
«Since [Zika] can be transmitted sexually, providers should counsel pregnant women whose male sexual partners are at risk
for Zika virus infection
about the importance of
condom use or abstinence to prevent Zika virus transmission,» the researchers write.
«There's been some speculation
about whether teenagers were substituting oral or anal sex
for vaginal sex and I found that wasn't so,» says Rosenbaum, «but I did uphold a previous finding that they are less likely to use birth control and drastically less likely in fact to use
condoms — it's a ten percentage point difference.»
Practicing safe sex is key to overall health; to always be on the safe side, wear a
condom, get tested
for HIV and other STDs, communicate with your partner
about concerns (are you worried hes not monogamous?)
Do you know
about it all
condoms industry have been given best effort to make happy
for all adult personals that are seeking more pleasure to make best sex with their partner?
It can be embarrassing headingto the drug store
for a pack of
condoms before meeting up with your charmingsenior date and even more embarrassing to talk to the date
about safe sex.
It can be embarrassing heading to the drug store
for a pack of
condoms before meeting up with your charming senior date and even more embarrassing to talk to the date
about safe sex.
If you're meeting someone
for a hookup, take a
condom (several, in fact), and be up - front
about your sexual boundaries.
«
About «Silent hill 2 ″ Bubble Head Nurse, my originally planned
for its head is a semiliquid thing covered with a thin skin like a
condom, and it bursts like a water balloon, when it's shotten.»
Ghimenti says that her daughter received no information
about condoms, birth control or preventing STIs in health class and that lack of information presented a health risk
for students.
I've been teaching college students
for 20 years — ever since I was a college student myself —
about condoms and contraception, consent, pleasure, love and romance, and social norms.
Something just ain't right
about thanking the Lord
for sending you an opportunistic pretty boy who carried a string of
condoms and single use packets of lube in his pocket.
«
About «Silent hill 2 ″ Bubble Head Nurse, my originally planned
for its head is a semiliquid thing covered with a thin skin like a
condom, and it bursts like a water balloon, when it's shotten.»
Bjorn Lomborg and his economist colleagues have produced a fascinating and unexpected consensus, which can start a debate
about global priorities: Should we prioritize a costly and uncertain attempt to reduce effects of global warming in a hundred years» time while millions are dying
for lack of mosquito nets or
condoms?»
Prevention is simple, and yet there is so much misinformation
about HIV You can do your part in preventing the spread of HIV: become educated
about HIV, insist on medically accurate and informative sex education in our schools, ALWAYS use
condoms or dental dams, and advocate
for research into the causes and cures
for HIV.
Condoms are one of the best ways
for sexually active people to avoid sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), but many worry that people are becoming more lax
about protecting themselves.
The study also reveals the need
for comprehensive sexuality education that includes information
about sexually transmitted diseases and the use of
condoms.
Even if you don't believe your teen should be having sex, talking with them
about birth control,
condoms, STD prevention, and pregnancy is important
for their health.
You may think that avoiding discussions
about sex, birth control, or
condoms sends the message that they're too young
for sex and that they'll avoid doing it to avoid making you upset.
No one had ever taught me
about condoms and the need
for safer sex, so I didn't have the tools to protect myself.
Planned Parenthood affiliates and Vox ®: Voices
for Planned Parenthood campus chapters nationwide are sponsoring activities to help foster discussion
about condom use among sexual partners.
Columbia University has good information
about barrier methods and cleaning methods, the Kinsey Institute has more tips
for reducing infection risk, and Planned Parenthood has instructions
for converting a
condom into a dental dam.
A recent study found that people who cheat were significantly less likely to use
condoms with partners outside of their primary relationship than people who practice NN (the percentage using
condoms was 48 % vs. 66 %
for vaginal intercourse and 32 % vs. 49 %
for anal intercourse, respectively).2 Not only that, but cheaters were less likely to discuss their sexual history and disease status, were more likely to have sex under the influence of drugs and alcohol, and were less inclined to tell their primary partners
about those sexual encounters.
For example, adolescents are more likely to become sexually active, and make choices
about whether to do so and take appropriate precautions, if their friends are doing the same (You don't use
condoms?
If you're worried
about how to pay
for condoms, your local Planned Parenthood health center can help you get
condoms and other birth control methods
for free or low cost.
I created a little bit of a controversy among our team in Malawi as I was designing the survey, including questions asking not just
about sex in general, but types of sex — vaginal or anal — and how often one uses
condoms for both types.
Rates of infidelity in «monogamous» relationships are also alarmingly high, hovering between 20 - 55 %, depending on what time frame you ask people
about (e.g., having ever cheated versus cheated in the last 5 years).3 Sadly, when cheaters cheat, they typically do not take protective measures to reduce sexually transmitted infections 100 % of the time.1 Then, when they have sex with their primary partner, they rarely use barrier protection (e.g.,
condoms); this puts all partners at risk
for diseases such as syphilis and HIV.
You can also visit a Planned Parenthood health center or other community health center
for condoms and advice
about birth control and STDs.
For example, people who communicate
about their sexual likes and dislikes with their romantic partners report higher levels of sexual satisfaction.1, 2 Young people who receive comprehensive sex education are more likely to use
condoms and take precautions against unwanted pregnancies compared to those who receive abstinence - only sex education.3 And exposure to people with diverse sexual identities contributes to reductions in stigma and prejudice.4, 5
Nearly six in ten residents (58 %) oppose the provision of state and / or federal funds
for education promoting abstinence - only - until - marriage that prohibits teaching
about the use of
condoms and contraception
for the prevention of unintended pregnancy, HIV / AIDS and STDs.
Kyrene School District currently uses abstinence - only - until marriage curricula, but supplements the information with outside sources,
for instance by inviting representatives from the health department to talk to students
about sexually transmitted diseases and
condom use.
Women's health advocates, women's health care providers, and researchers have argued
for years (and two different presidential administrations)
about the safety of emergency contraception and the importance of its place on the shelf, between the pregnancy tests and the
condoms.