Sentences with phrase «condom use if»

Activities are designed to help teens get the skills they need to negotiate and practice abstinence and correct condom use if sexually active.

Not exact matches

«But as we said above, it doesn't protect one from STIs, so one should always use a condom if not in a mutually monogamous relationship.»
if you are late starting your active pills, or have missed pills, she recommends using a secondary form of contraception such as condoms.
If you're allergic to latex, your symptoms would only show up if your partner is using a condoIf you're allergic to latex, your symptoms would only show up if your partner is using a condoif your partner is using a condom.
«These industries are so antiquated, but nobody's approached them because it's very hard to dynamically change an industry or really innovate if you don't inherently use it and understand it at its core,» says Zak, who is also an angel investor in female - oriented condom startup Sustain.
as a catholic who went through catholic school from nursery to my college graduation i whole heartedly believe that God does not condemn people from using birth control pills for their health and well being as well as from preventing pregnancy because if pills and condoms werent used future abortions would happen and kill innocent lives and men and women could contract life threatening diseases that could kill them
@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.
If you contract a STD and want universal health care to cover the cost of the anti-biotic, show your sales slips for the purchase of the condoms along with verication from your partner that you used one.
Access to birth control and education on the proper uses (like, even if you're on birth control, the guy should still wear a condom) of it, as well as true education about intercourse, what causes disease and how giving birth affects the female body is one of the most responsible things we can help the poor with.
If you are using only a condom, you are playing Russian roulette.
To allow condom use within marriage even if there is no contraceptive intent would amount to an abandonment of the Church's fundamental teaching on what is required for sexual activity truly to realise the «one flesh» unity of the couple and so to be morally acceptable.
@myweightinwords: If I had a teenage daughter, she would have an IUD implanted at 13 and she would know how to use and have access to condoms.
I guess the question is if using contraceptives the day after a condom breaks to prevent pregnancy is an abortion or not.
If I had a teenage daughter, she would have an IUD implanted at 13 and she would know how to use and have access to condoms.
The same goes for ridiculous health policies perpetuated by the church, which thinks that it's «sinful» to protect people from AIDS if it involves the use of a condom.
The papal condemnation of condom use is making the fight against AIDS much more difficult, if not impossible, in places like sub-Saharan Africa, where there is an estimated 22 million people infected.
Of course, this would be helped if a certain religion taught that using condoms was wrong.
Catholic organizations have no problem paying non-Catholics to work for them and those non-Catholic's can take that money that was paid to them and pay for an abortion, go gambling in Vegas, buy medical marijuana, buy condoms or even visit a Nevada «Chicken Ranch» if they want to, all funded by the Catholic Church, but don't you dare tell the Church they have to pay into a healthcare system where some employee's may choose to use those health benefits to pay for contraceptives?
If someone finds contraceptives offensive, by all means don't use them, don't buy insurance and don't work in a condom factory, but refrain from dictating your beliefs to people of other faiths.
i.e If the Pill and male condoms were used properly, abortion would not be an issue and Obama would not be president.
Of course, if her impregnator had used a condom (~ 32 cents with free prime shipping from Amazon), she and he would have saved a lot of money and potential STD exposure.
Now if he can just tell people it is ok to use condoms to prevent AIDS he'll be an actual saint.
If appropriate adjustments were made to the statistics for reported condom use (in the few programs that actually follow up distribution with surveys), the already modest numbers would shrink to practically nothing.
@Ken, I don't know... Vasectomies would be great if they protected against STDs, but I'd worry vasectomies might decrease condom use while keeping se.x levels the same.
You need to understand that if you do not want to become pregnant, the only way to ensure is to use birth control whenever you have sex.Using a diaphragm or condoms during sex will keep you from dealing with unwanted pregnancies.
If you decide to wait, be sure to use condoms in the meantime.
Be sure to get a water - based lubricant, especially if you're using a barrier method for birth control, since oil - based lubricants can weaken latex and cause a condom to break.
«nobody has suggested that circumcision replace primary methods of STD & birth control such as the proper use of condoms» Then why does Isaac Ikone in Kenya say «I don't like condoms; if there is a better way to prevent HIV so that I can enjoy sex skin - to - skin, I will do it.»?
If you are willing to take hormones as well, using condoms in conjunction with a pill or an IUD can make it almost impossible for you to get pregnant until you're ready.
But, if you do want to give it a try, remember to use a condom if you are still bleeding to prevent infections (and new babies...).
That said, if you absolutely want to avoid conception you should consider using an additional method of birth control, such as condoms.
Mayo Clinic recommends pregnant women use condoms when having sex with a new partner, or if your relationships isn't monogamous.
So even if you don't intend to rely on condoms for the long term, you can use them while you're waiting to start your preferred birth control method.
If you suspect your partner has sex with other people or uses IV drugs, be sure to use a latex condom every time you have intercourse and a dental dam every time you have oral sex.
So if you're at risk for STIs, you'll need to use condoms anyway.
If risk exists for STI / HIV (including during pregnancy or postpartum), the correct and consistent use of condoms is recommended, either alone or with another contraceptive method.
If your doctor has ordered birth control pills for you, you should use another form of birth control (such as foam and condoms) for the first month until your menstrual periods become regular.
If your partner has been exposed to Zika, use a barrier contraceptive (condom) or avoid sexual contact altogether.
Be sure to use another birth control method (such as condoms) in the meantime because the IUD isn't effective if it's not completely inside your uterus.
If you are not using hormonal birth control and want to limit your chances of getting pregnant without using condoms, you need to time your intercourse correctly.
If you have multiple partners, you should use a condom, even while pregnant, and you should always use condoms with a new sexual partner until you have both been screened for STIs.
Or penetration is permitted but only if a condom is used.
US health authorities on Friday urged people to use condoms or refrain from sex if they live in or have traveled to areas where the Zika virus is circulating.
«As I said, you never know with women, but if she has other partners, I hope she uses condoms with them.»
If one of these people (they're called cut points in the sociologists» study) used a condom and knocked out cross-clique infiltration, he could single - handedly short - circuit the epidemic.
Many researchers and affected communities also worry that PrEP could backfire if it increases risk - taking behavior such as having sex with more partners or deciding not to use condoms.
One argument against the NHS supplying the drugs is that many of those at high risk of HIV wouldn't need PrEP if they used condoms.
«The bottom line is that cocaine appears to increase sexual desire, and even though users who are on cocaine report being likely to use a condom if they had one in a risky sex situation, if a condom isn't available, cocaine makes people less willing to postpone sex to get a condom,» says Johnson.
The findings in this report emphasize the need for pregnant women to avoid travel to areas with active Zika virus transmission and consistently and correctly use condoms to prevent sexual transmission throughout pregnancy if their partner has recently traveled to an area of active Zika virus transmission.
If you are HIV - positive, using a condom can reduce the risk that you will transmit the virus to others.
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