Journal of South Asian Federation of Obstetrics and Gynaecology

Register      Login

VOLUME 7 , ISSUE 1 ( January-April, 2015 ) > List of Articles

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Contraceptive Acceptability of Female Condom: A Prospective Study

Citation Information : Contraceptive Acceptability of Female Condom: A Prospective Study. J South Asian Feder Obs Gynae 2015; 7 (1):10-14.

DOI: 10.5005/jp-journals-10006-1312

Published Online: 01-09-2016

Copyright Statement:  Copyright © 2015; The Author(s).


Abstract

PDF Share
  1. Female condom introduction and sexually transmitted infection prevalence: results of a community intervention trial in Kenya. AIDS. 2001;15(8):1037-1044.
  2. Protection against sexually transmitted diseases by granting sex workers in Thailand the choice of using the male or female condom: results from a randomized controlled trial. AIDS. 1998;12(14): 1851-1859.
  3. Protection against sexually transmitted diseases by granting sex workers in Thailand the choice of using the male or female condom: results from a randomized controlled trial, AIDS, 1998;12(14): 1851-1859.
  4. Effectiveness of an intervention promoting the female condom to patients at sexually transmitted disease clinics. Am J Public Health 2000;90(2): 237-244.
  5. Male-condom and female-condom use among women after counseling in a risk-reduction hierarchy for STD prevention, Sexually Transmitted Diseases 2000;27(8):431-437.
  6. Longterm use of the female condom among couples at high risk of human immunodeficiency virus infection in Zambia, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 1998;25(5):260-264.
  7. Female condom use in a gender-specific family planning clinic trial. Am J Public Health 2003;93(11):1897-1903.
  8. Female condom use among women at high risk of sexually transmitted disease, Family Planning Perspectives, 2000;32(3):138-144.
  9. The female condom (Femidom): a study of user acceptability, South African Med J 1995;85(Suppl. 10:)S1081-S1084.
  10. Preliminary comparison of the polyurethane female condom with the latex male condom in Kenya. East African Med J 1996;73(2):101-106.
  11. A validation and reduced form of the female condom attitudes scale. AIDS Education and Prevention 2002;14(2):158-171.
  12. Factors associated with use of the female condom. Family Planning Perspectives 1997;29(4):181-184.
  13. Predictors of difficulty inserting the female condom. Contraception 2002;65(2):151-157.
  14. Performance of the Reality polyurethane female condom and a synthetic latex prototype: a randomized crossover trial among South African women. Contraception 2006;73(4):386-393.
  15. Contraceptive efficacy and acceptability of the female condom. Am J Public Health 1994;84(12):1960-1964.
  16. Constraints faced by sex workers in use of female and male condoms for safer sex in urban Zimbabwe. J Urban Health: Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 2011;78(4):581-592.
  17. The acceptability and experience of the female condom, Femidom, among family planning clinic attenders. British J Family Planning 1993;19(2):187-192.
  18. Acceptability of the female condom among STD clinic patients. AIDS Education and Prevention 1998;10(5):465-480.
  19. Heterosexual men's attitudes toward the female condom. AIDS Education and Prevention 1999; 11(2):93-106.
  20. Female condom (Femidom): a clinical study of its use-effectiveness and patient acceptability. British J Family Planning 1992;18(2): 36-41.
  21. The female condom: attitudes and experiences among HIV-positive heterosexual women and men. Women and Health 2003;37(1):71-89.
  22. Effectiveness of the female condom in preventing HIV/STI transmission and pregnancy. Presented at. Global Consultation on the Female Condom, Baltimore, Maryland 2005 Sep;26-29.
  23. The female condom: tool for women's empowerment, Am J Public Health 2000;90(9):1377-1381.
  24. The Female Condom: A Guide for Planning and Programming. Geneva: WHO, UNAIDS; 2000. Available at: http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/publications/RHR_00_8/index.html.
PDF Share
PDF Share

© Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers (P) LTD.