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[personal profile] jackofallgeeks
From This article on an increasing trend in AIDs infections:

Simply focusing on treatment or politically uncontroversial prevention methods will not suffice. "You can't put all your eggs in the abstinence basket," said Hays. "We need a menu of strategies for real people," he said, adding that condom distribution as well as new methods, such as a vaccine, are needed.

OK, so we all know my personal stance here, but I'm honestly curious: I hear a lot of talk about condoms and the like as a means of 'safe sex,' but I've never seen any statistics on it. Generally I take all statistics with a grain of salt anyways (too many ways to bend the numbers, in my opinion), but I know there's still a chance of pregnancy when using condoms, so I'm just curious what things look like numerically on AIDs prevention.

And I'll be honest, what bothers me the most about the "can't put all your eggs in the abstinence basket" quip is the implication that we as humans generally lack the self-control to not sleep around. I mean, we're not really talking about a religious issue here any more -- the answer to "what's wrong with having sex" is no longer "God doesn't like it," it's "you could get AIDs and die." One would imagine that's a big enough stick to get most people to at least think about who they're sleeping with -- at the very least you shouldn't sleep with someone you know is sick, right? And you certainly shouldn't sleep with someone you can't trust is being honest about their sexual history. So... yeah. That's my thought for the moment.

Date: 2006-11-28 05:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mmeubiquitous.livejournal.com
Thing is about pregnancy vs. HIV - there are three days per cycle (so roughly per month) that having sex can result in a woman getting pregnant (the egg is only able to be fertilized for roughly 24 hours, while the sperm can live in a woman's body waiting for said egg for those three days). So to get a 2% pregnancy rate on a condom, that condom has to be failing was more often than that, since for 26+/- days out of the month a torn condom will not lead to pregnancy because it can't. There is, however no comparable good or bad time for HIV exposure.

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John Noble

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