| Literature DB >> 11942468 |
Ana Penman-Aguilar1, Jeffrey Hall, Lynn Artz, Myra A Crawford, Nadine Peacock, Juliana van Olphen, Lutissa Parker, Maurizio Macaluso.
Abstract
Although male partner resistance to female condom use has been reported, little is understood about circumstances under which partners will agree to female condom use. This study documents the experiences of couples who have worked together to achieve female condom use. As part of a prospective female condom efficacy study, female participants (age 18-34) received a behavioral intervention and an assortment of take-home items. Selected women and their partners were recruited for a qualitative interview focusing on their experience with the female condom. Interviews were transcribed, double-coded, and verified using a standard retrieval coding system. Twenty-six pairs of linked interviews were analyzed dyadically: 9 couples who used the female condom "consistently," 12 "experimenters," and 5 "non-users." Women who successfully promoted the female condom to their partners used multiple presentation strategies. Initial male partner reaction did not predict continued use beyond the first trial. In conclusion, employment of multiple strategies facilitates successful introduction of the female condom into a sexual partnership.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 11942468 DOI: 10.1300/J013v35n01_03
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Women Health ISSN: 0363-0242