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Condom Availability
& Programming There
is a global crisis in the availability of all reproductive health materials, particularly
condoms and other contraceptives. Distribution is spotty, supplies are erratic,
prices are unpredictable, and the quality may be unreliable. Broader questions
of access, user perspective and culture also arise in any programme to make condoms
widely available. Condom
programming is a management system developed to respond to this crisis systematically
at global and national levels. Condoms are an essential reproductive health commodity,
and the UN Population Fund supports programmes that not only supply them but also
build a country's capacity to meet its own reproductive health needs. Condoms
are an effective method of preventing HIV/AIDS infection for both men and women.
They also prevent sexually transmitted infections (STIs), reducing the risk of
AIDS linked to STIs. Male
and female condoms can be made available in non-traditional outlets such as small
shops, bars, vending machines, workplace restrooms, etc., at highly affordable
prices. Condom programming also includes advocacy for development of microbicides
and other woman-controlled methods of contraception. The
problem:
An estimated 6 billion condoms are distributed every year,1 far short
of current need, and the need is growing rapidly. Earth's
population of 6.1 billion includes the largest generation ever of 15- 25- year-olds--1
billion young people just entering reproductive life. Demand
for condoms and family planning is growing worldwide with the spread of health
care and rising awareness of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. The
current condom supply in sub- Saharan Africa, where AIDS is worst, now equals
three for every man per year. Having
a STI increases the risk of HIV infection tenfold.1 Every year, 333 million new
STIs are reported-about one million per day or 650 per minute. Most occur among
young people age 15- 24. Only
four percent of married women in developing countries report that their partners
use condoms, making condoms and vasectomies the least-used contraceptive methods
worldwide.
Challenges
to increasing condom use: Condoms
may be seen as clumsy, reducing pleasure, breaking easily or appropriate only
for illicit sex outside marriage. The
perception that women or girls who ask their partners to use condoms are either
unfaithful, or are planning to be, silences women, who fear reprisal or scandal.
|  | Men
may assign women responsibility for contraception but still refuse to use condoms.
Government
agencies and decisionmakers may not see the long-term benefits of acting to finance
and create the infrastructure required for adequate distribution. The
cost of quality contraceptives and condoms needed is projected to rise in the
next 15 years from US $810 million per year to US $1.8 billion.
Global
Strategy for Reproductive Health Commodity Security Advocacy:
to build a global political commitment to supplying commodities and services.
Building
national capacity: to forecast, finance, procure and deliver reliable supplies
and services over the long term to all who need them. Financing: to ensure sustainable
flows of materials. Coordination:
to simplify procedures, speed deliveries and maximize donors' help at minimum
cost. | The
solution: In
2000, the UN Population Fund and its partners developed the Global Strategy for
Reproductive Health Commodity Security, integrating it into all UNFPA country
programmes. To ensure a worldwide supply of commodities that is adequate, dependable
and diverse-the right thing, at the right time, in the right place, at the right
price (see box). The
partnership brings together major donors, technical experts, NGOs and the private
sector to develop models for making affordable commercial products and services
more accessible. Social
marketing uses advertising, subsidies and creative promotion to create demand
for contraceptives and keep prices low, especially for condoms, especially among
men, and to take stigma out of their use. The campaigns also seek to demystify
sexuality and make it possible to discuss HIV/AIDS, while promoting abstinence,
monogamy and safer sex. Careful
promotional and educational campaigns can make condoms acceptable in traditional
cultures. Men in particular need education and encouragement to become personally
involved and motivated in the effort to stop AIDS. |  |