Predictors of difficulty inserting the female condom

Contraception
L ArtzMaurizio Macaluso

Abstract

This article describes the frequency of initial difficulty inserting the female condom and identifies predictors of insertion difficulty among women at risk of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). Female STD clinic patients (n = 1144) were taught how to insert the female condom by using an anatomic model, then given an opportunity for self-insertion practice. Correct placement of the condom was verified by a nurse clinician, and the number of attempts required for correct insertion was recorded. Sociodemographic and psychosocial predictors of refusing the insertion practice and of difficulty inserting the female condom were evaluated using logistic regression. Only 5% of study participants refused the self-insertion practice. Women who never had a Papanicolaou smear test, did not use tampons, never used an inserted method of STD prevention/birth control, and disliked the insertion features of intravaginal barrier methods were more likely to refuse the self-insertion practice. Of those who attempted self-insertion, 25% were unable to insert the female condom correctly on the first attempt. Women who never expressed their sexual likes and were indifferent to the positive features of intravaginal contraceptive methods were more l...Continue Reading

References

Aug 1, 1991·Contraception·S Jivasak-Apimas
Apr 1, 1990·American Journal of Public Health·C Sakondhavat
Aug 1, 1997·Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology·E McCabeA C Lee

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Citations

Feb 22, 2012·Sexual Health·Maria F GalloPatricia S Coffey
Nov 6, 2003·American Journal of Public Health·Susie HoffmanZena Stein
May 30, 2006·Contraception·Patricia S CoffeyJessica Cohen
Oct 28, 2016·The Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research·Xianmi WangYimin Cheng
Jun 27, 2019·The Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care : JANAC·Lahong JuXi Chen
Oct 30, 2019·BMC Women's Health·Vallejo-Medina PabloPérez-Durán Claudia

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