Gay condoms
Gay Pride Condoms pcs
The free reward program that rewards your loyalty, you can earn points and redeem them on your purchases. Start saving!
Health points
=1€ discount
Earn points for every purchase
Place an order and earn 3 points for every euro spent.
1€ spent = 3 points
Save
Use your points as a payment method - for every points you earn, you get a 1€ discount!
Points and promotional codes are not compatible with the purchase of medicines, special milks or infant milks from 0 to 6 months.
Product temporarily out of stock
Log into your account and set up an alert to be notified when the product becomes obtainable again.
Log in
Do you want us to notify you when it is available?
Latex condoms without spermicide and alcohol
Description
Made of latex with no animal components, Pasante condoms provide a easy fit with their standard size and flared head. The design of its aluminum wrapper alludes to gay pride and supports this movement with four adj desi
Q&A: Decline in condom apply indicates need for further education, awareness
Research | Social science | UW News blog
February 27,
A new University of Washington study measures changes in sex without condoms among HIV-negative gay and bisexual men who are not taking y
New research from the University of Washington shows that condom use has been trending downward among younger gay and bisexual men over the last decade, even when they aren’t taking pre-exposure prophylaxis, or PrEP.
The study, published Feb. 27 in AIDS and Behavior, measures changes in sex without condoms among HIV-negative gay and bisexual men who are not taking PrEP. Using data from the cycles of the American Men’s Internet Survey — a web-based survey of cisgender men ages 15 and older who include sex with men (MSM) — researchers found that roughly half of HIV-negative men reported using condoms at least sometimes in the last year. That was higher than the 15% of respondents who reported using PrEP.
But HIV-negative MSM who are not using PrEP seem to be not using condoms increasi
Ugandan gay men talk about why they do not always apply condoms
Gay men and other men who have sex with men (MSM) in Uganda, who had not used a condom the last time they had anal sex with another male, were most likely to verb that condoms not being solid enough for anal sex, a lack of suitable lubricant and, in rural areas, a lack of access to condoms were the most common reasons they did not use them.
A number of other reasons were also mentioned, such as pressure from primary or commercial sex partners, false beliefs about the safety of anal sex, lack of pleasure, and ignorance about how to use condoms. Alcohol was also mentioned frequently as a disinhibitor of condomless sex.
While there have been numerous studies among gay and other MSM in high-income, more liberal countries about why they don’t always or ever use condoms, researchers have rarely asked the similar questions of MSM in low-income countries, especially ones where male/male sex is criminalised and highly stigmatised. Nonetheless, as the researchers point out, MSM are as disproportionately affected by HIV in such
Some Gay Men on PrEP May Stop Using Condoms. Does It Matter?
When I talk to my adolescent patients about sex and sexuality, there’s a line I usually include in my patter. I tell them that they’re in my office for medical advice, not moral guidance. The questions I ask and information I give are for the purposes of keeping them protected and healthy, not so I can pass judgment on their character.
Ironically, it’s when I verb patients who are gay men like me that I sometimes need to keep any moralizing in check.
In , the National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund and the National Coalition for LGBT Health noted the demand for ongoing education and treatment for sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Their guide specifically notes “People on PrEP may be less likely to use condoms, perceiving other STIs/STDs as easily cured despite the troubling rise of drug resistant gonorrhea.”
“PrEP” is brief for pre-exposure prophylaxis. It’s a regimen of two different medications that, when taken daily, can substantially reduce the likelihood of being infected with HIV for those at increased risk, inclu