Africa Asia Middle East عربي Français Português Subscribe RSS IRIN Site Map
PlusNews
Global HIV/AIDS news and analysis
Advanced search
 Saturday 28 February 2009
 
Home 
Africa 
Blog 
Weekly reports 
In-Depth reports 
Country profiles 
Fact files 
Events 
Most read 
 
Print report
UGANDA: Ditched female condom makes a comeback


Photo: Lourenço Silva/PlusNews
The government halted distribution of the female condom in 2007
KAMPALA, 12 February 2009 (PlusNews) - The female condom has resurfaced in Uganda's prevention programme almost one and a half years after the government halted distribution of the prophylactic due to poor uptake by women.

"Women - both married and single - have asked us to bring back the female condom," Vashta Kibirige, coordinator of the condom unit at the Ministry of Health, told IRIN/PlusNews. "They want a procedure within their control and need more choices for prevention."

In 2007 the government said women had complained that the female condom was not user-friendly and was noisy during intercourse; at the time, AIDS campaigners and gender activists accused the government of not trying hard enough to promote female-controlled methods of HIV prevention.

Kibirige said her ministry had carried out a situation analysis to gauge the acceptability of the female condom by women across the country before it was reintroduced.

The analysis found that on the whole, women wanted a method that would give them control in protecting themselves from sexually transmitted infections and unwanted pregnancy.

But not all women agreed with reintroducing the female condom: in western Uganda women largely felt it went against their culture, while Karimojong women in the northeast often tore off the condoms' rings for use as decorative bangles.

Kibirige said the ministry would embark on a sensitisation campaign to ensure the prophylactic was accepted in all parts of the country. "One hundred thousand female condoms are going to be distributed, basically to target groups that showed interest in them, mainly in the eastern and central parts of the country."

The new female condoms will be available at government health centres for a small fee, which activists say defeats the purpose of making them available because most Ugandan women cannot afford to pay for them.

Sylvia Namabidde, a member of parliament, said charging women for the condoms could lead to re-use, which raised issues of hygiene and health.

About 1.5 million female condoms were procured by the government ten years ago; some were distributed free of charge but many are still on the shelves of the National Medical Stores.

en/kr/he


Theme(s): (PLUSNEWS) HIV/AIDS (PlusNews)

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
Print report
Countries
FREE Subscriptions
Your e-mail address:


Submit your request
 More on Uganda
27/Feb/2009
GLOBAL: New insight into HI-virus
11/Feb/2009
UGANDA: Christine Akello, "I pray that a health centre is brought nearer our village"
10/Feb/2009
GLOBAL: A glimmer of hope for microbicide research
10/Feb/2009
GLOBAL: Optimistic UNAIDS sets ambitious goals
06/Feb/2009
GLOBAL: Global Fund facing shortfall
 More on HIV/AIDS (PlusNews)
27/Feb/2009
GLOBAL: New insight into HI-virus
27/Feb/2009
KENYA: Jane, "I told them I was HIV-positive ... they raped me anyway"
27/Feb/2009
GLOBAL: IRIN/PlusNews Weekly Issue 427, 27 February 2009
27/Feb/2009
MOZAMBIQUE: Bridging the prevention gap
26/Feb/2009
ZAMBIA: Copper-mining downturn sees upturn in sex trade
Share:
Back | Home page

Services:  Africa | Asia | Middle East | Radio | Film & TV | Photo | Live news map | E-mail subscription
Feedback · E-mail Webmaster · IRIN Terms & Conditions · Really Simple Syndication News Feeds · About PlusNews · Jobs · Bookmark PlusNews · Donors

Copyright © IRIN 2009
This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. Republication is subject to terms and conditions as set out in the IRIN copyright page.