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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / AIDS / February 2007

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NYC Condoms

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GMCarter - 31 Jan 2007 01:26 GMT
http://www.eatg.org/news/newsitem.php?id=781
NYC to launch official condom
Thursday, January 25, 2007
   
Available soon from City Hall: an official New York City condom.

By Sara Kugler

NEW YORK — Available soon from City Hall: an official New York City
condom.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration is focused on reducing rates
of sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS, and part of the strategy is
the aggressive promotion of free condoms. Officials are banking on the
idea that more people will use condoms if they're wrapped in jazzy
packaging.

One idea for the design of the official city condom is a subway theme,
with maps and colors of the different lines emblazoned on the
wrappers. The health department says a number of possibilities are
under consideration.

"Brands work, and people use branded items more than they use non
branded items, whether it's a cola or a medicine even," Health
Commissioner Thomas Frieden said in an interview. "Brands add value
and they increase use."

New York is already a big player in the condom market. The city hands
out 1.5 million free condoms each month, or about 18 million a year.
Hundreds of organizations get free condoms from the city and
distribute them at various locations, including health clinics and
advocacy groups, bars, restaurants, nail salons, nightclubs and even
prisons.

By comparison, the Los Angeles County health department gives out just
over a million condoms per year, according to Peter Kerndt, director
of the department's STD program. In Los Angeles, health and advocacy
organizations request and then restribute condoms, and individuals can
order up to 10 at a time by calling a hot line.

New York negotiated a deal with the maker of the Lifestyles brand for
4 cents per condom, putting the expense to the city at just $720,000
annually, according to health officials.

Once the newly-designed condoms are available, city officials hope the
distinctive wrapper will enable them to better understand the
effectiveness of their distribution program. They plan to do that
through the annual community health survey that polls 10,000 New
Yorkers by telephone.

"We ask, 'Did you use a condom the last time you had sex?' And once
this is launched, the next time we ask that question, of those people
who say yes, we'll say, 'What did the wrapper look like?'" Frieden
said. "And if they describe our wrapper, then we'll know that they
would have used our condom."

Right now, it is difficult to know. The free condoms given out by the
city are wrapped in the red packaging from the Lifestyles brand, a
product of Ansell Healthcare Products LLC. The company declined to
discuss its contract with the city and referred all questions to the
health department.

The number of condoms distributed by the city multiplied several times
over after the health department launched its online ordering system
in 2005. Individuals cannot order there, but any other type of
organization or venue can request unlimited free condoms through the
Web site.

The Duplex, a bar in the West Village, offers free condoms in a bowl
at its entryway and on a table by the restrooms. Day manager C.T. Cook
said they order about 3,000 per month from the city.

"It's very important to show that we encourage safe sex and for people
to be responsible," he said. "If you're under the influence, you might
make poor judgements and act without thinking, so if it's easier to
obtain condoms, this can probably help prevent mistakes."

Gay Men's Health Crisis, an non-profit dedicated to fighting AIDS,
orders half a million free condoms each year, spokeswoman Lynn
Schulman said. It is one of about 800 groups that did so last year.

The group offers the condoms in bowls scattered throughout their
organization's offices, hands them out at the annual AIDS walk, and
gives them to establishments like gay bars.

Widespread free distribution started after Frieden became health
commissioner in 2002 and discovered that the city's STD disease
clinics were limiting each patient to just a small number.

"I thought that was nuts _ of all the people you'd like to have an
unlimited supply of condoms, it's people who have an STD," said
Frieden. "Condoms work, they're just not where they need to be as
often as they need to be."

There is now even a bowl of condoms outside Frieden's office.

More than 100,000 New Yorkers are living with HIV and AIDS. And city
officials are troubled by one subcategory in particular _ the 1,000 or
so people each year who find out they have AIDS, but never knew they
even had HIV. AIDS remains the third-leading cause of death among New
Yorkers under 65.

It can take years for AIDS to develop in HIV-infected people, which
means they can unknowingly infect others during that time if they
don't know they have the virus and aren't using condoms.

New York officials don't yet have their own data on the effectiveness
of their free condom program, but many experts say large-scale free
distribution is a crucial tool of public health policy.

Dr. Thomas Farley, a former state health official for Louisiana and
now a professor at Tulane University's School of Public Health,
oversaw a condom-distribution program in the 1990s. For the first
three years of the initiative, condoms were provided free at health
clinics, bars, restaurants, liquor stores, supermarkets _ everywhere
possible.

During that time, surveys found that condom use increased
substantially. Then, during a budget shortfall, condoms were offered
at 8 cents each to those venues, which could then sell them for 25
cents each. Condom use decreased dramatically.

Health officials reinstated the free program, and condom use rose
again.

"The conclusion was that condoms needed to be free and freely
available," he said. "As a public service, it's much less expensive
than the cost of HIV treatment, which is heavily
government-subsidized."

SOURCE: Chron.com
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/4498801.html
Doug Houge - 05 Feb 2007 01:46 GMT
If any anyone would ask me, which I wonder why thry would, I would say that
what's happening here is that we're trying produce a culture that analagizes
sex with protection.  It takes a long time change a cultures ways and mores
but over time, they come to accept that the change is for the better.
> http://www.eatg.org/news/newsitem.php?id=781
> NYC to launch official condom
[quoted text clipped - 128 lines]
> SOURCE: Chron.com
> http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/4498801.html

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