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Associated Press, July 5, 2005
Condom labels
at center of debate
Everyone knows condoms prevent pregnancy and
protect against sexually transmitted diseases.
But how well do they work? That question is
at the center of a debate over whether the
labels on condom packages should be changed.
On one side are abstinence advocates, including
a conservative congressman who is blocking
appointment of a new federal drug agency chief
until the labels are changed. On the other
side are "safe sex" advocates who
fear label changes could undermine confidence
in condoms and increase the spread of AIDS
and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Each side has some truth in its argument: Condoms
are very effective against the AIDS virus,
but data for their effectiveness against some
other STDs is surprisingly spotty.
"They do not provide 100 percent protection,
but for people who are sexually active they
are the best and the only method we have for
preventing these diseases," said Heather
Boonstra, a public policy official with the
Alan Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit group
that researches reproductive health issues.
Boonstra said Republican Sen. Tom Coburn, a physician
from Oklahoma, and the abstinence-promoting
Medical Institute for Sexual Health are "manipulating
this data to drive home their own anti-condom,
anti-contraceptive message."
James Trussell, who serves on the board of the
Guttmacher Institute and is director of Princeton
University's Office of Population Research,
said there is "absolutely incontrovertible
evidence" that condoms reduce transmission
of the most serious sexually transmitted disease,
AIDS.
"To my mind, everything else is gravy,"
Trussell said this week. "All of this
is ideologically motivated. What they're really
concerned about is people who are not married
having sex."
A hold on nomination
But John Hart, spokesman for Coburn, said the
senator's June 15 hold on Lester Crawford's
nomination as commissioner of the Food and
Drug Administration is an effort to make Crawford
obey a 2000 law Coburn sponsored. It requires
the FDA to change condom labels to give more
information on their "effectiveness or
lack of the effectiveness in preventing STDs."
Hart said FDA officials recently have said
they will have a draft of the language soon.
FDA spokeswoman Julie Zawisza said she could
not discuss policy issues.
Dr. Marie Savard, a women's health specialist
in Philadelphia, said she has qualms about
using the word "ineffective" but
agreed people need reliable information. "The
labeling should be changed to something like,
'condoms protect better against some STDs than
others,'" Savard said.
Currently, the FDA requires condom boxes and
packets to state: "If used properly, latex
condoms will help to reduce the risk of transmission
of HIV infection (AIDS) and many other sexually
transmitted diseases." Many brands also
state condoms are highly effective in preventing
pregnancy.
When latex condoms are used every time and put
on early enough, they reduce chances of pregnancy
over a one-year period to 3 percent, compared
with 85 percent without birth control. Likewise,
condoms cut risk of HIV infection by about
80 percent, to less than a 1 percent chance
of infection per year.
According to the National Institutes of Health,
condoms are impervious to the smallest viruses
and only break or slip off 1 percent to 2 percent
of the time. But surveys show most people don't
use them properly or consistently, and roughly
12 million Americans each year contract an
STD.
A 2001 NIH expert panel, convened at Coburn's
request, examined dozens of published studies.
It reported that for STDs besides AIDS and
gonorrhea, for which condoms cut transmission
by 50 percent to 100 percent, the evidence
on protection is unclear because of weak and
contradictory studies. Individual studies cited
in the report give prevention rates ranging
from 18 percent to 92 percent, depending on
the disease.
The Medical Institute for Sexual Health's board
chairman, Dr. Tom Fitch, who has previously
pushed FDA officials for label changes, said
some STDs are much more easily spread than
others. In addition, STDs such as herpes and
human papilloma virus, or HPV, can be transmitted
by contact with skin not covered by a condom.
Advocating abstinence
Fitch said he would not discourage condom use,
but his group advocates abstinence or monogamy
and it trains teachers how to teach abstinence.
That's an "unrealistic explanation"
for young people, said Dr. Shari Brasner, an
obstetrician-gynecologist at Mount Sinai Medical
Center in New York who has patients as young
as 13 who are sexually active. "These
conservatives are the same people that are
trying to limit access to the morning-after
[birth control] pill. They'll leave us with
nothing."Meanwhile, Lori Heise of the
Global Campaign for Microbicides, said that
her group is trying to correct the false belief
that nonoxynol-9, the spermicide used in contraceptive
creams, some lubricated condoms and some personal
lubricants, protects against spread of STDs.
Recent evidence shows that it does not.
She said the detergent-like spermicide can irritate
the vagina or rectum, making it easier to become
infected with an STD. The campaign is working
to have nonoxynol-9 removed from lubricants
and condoms.
Underprotected
Condoms help prevent transmission of HIV, but
they are less effective with other diseases.
Hundreds of thousands of new sexually transmitted
disease cases are reported each year, with
chlamydia the most common.
New reported STD cases, 2003
HIV - 33,301
Syphilis - 34,270
Chlamydia - 877,478
Gonorrhea - 335,104
Chancroid (genital ulcers) - 54
Genital herpes - 203,000*
Genital warts** - 264,000*
Vaginal trichomoniasis - 179,000*
* Number of initial visits
** Caused by human papilloma virus.
SOURCE: CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION
<< Associated Press -- 7/5/05 >>
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