Condom Fallacies
Short-Sighted Campaigns Spread Diseases
By Father John Flynn, LC
ROME, FEB. 11, 2008 (Zenit.org).- The issue of wide-scale distribution of condoms is
in the news once more. In the days preceding Brazil's Carnival celebrations
authorities announced they would be handing out 19.5 million free condoms,
reported Reuters on Jan. 28.
A British medical journal, the Lancet, also recently
criticized the Church for its opposition to condoms. An editorial in the Jan.
26 edition of the journal chided Benedict XVI for not changing Church teaching
so that condoms could be used by Catholics in preventing HIV/AIDS infections.
The simplistic assumption that condoms are the
solution to sexually transmitted diseases is, however, increasingly being
proved false. In its Jan. 26 issue, the British Medical Journal published a
forum on condoms, with contrasting articles for and against on the topic.
Even the article in favor of condoms, by Markus
Steiner and Willard Cates, admitted that in addition to condoms there is a need
for "risk avoidance and risk reduction approaches." Such measures,
they explained, include delayed initiation of sexual intercourse, and mutual
faithfulness.
In his article putting forward the "no"
case, Stephen Genuis clearly stated: "Firstly, condoms cannot be the
definitive answer to sexually transmitted infection because they provide
insufficient protection against transmission of many common diseases."
Genius also pointed out that: "Epidemiological
research repeatedly shows that condom familiarity and risk awareness do not
result in sustained safer sex choices in real life."
More of the same
Faced with such arguments about the failure of condoms
and sex education campaigns, the reaction is of ten to call for more of the
same. A typical example was the recent news from Australia, where it was found
that 60% of Australian women who have unplanned pregnancies were using
contraceptive pills or condoms.
According to the Jan. 30 report by the Melbourne-based
Age newspaper, family planning groups responded by calling for more sexual
education programs.
Nevertheless, in his British Medical Journal article
Genius pointed out the fallacy of such arguments. In relation to condom and
"safe sex" campaigns, he said: "The relentless rise of sexually
transmitted infection in the face of unprecedented education about and
promotion of condoms is testament to the lack of success of this approach.
"In numerous large studies, concerted efforts to
promote use of condoms has consistently failed to control rates of sexually
transmitted infection -- even in countries with advanced sex education programs
such as Canada, Sweden and Switzerland."
In countries such as Thailand and Cambodia, where
sexually transmitted infections have diminished, Genius argued that a careful
scrutiny of the data reveals that the changes resulted not from condom use, but
from changes in sexual behavior.
"Innumerable adolescents saturated with condom
focused sex education fail to have their fundamental human needs met and end up
contracting sexually transmitted infections," Genius concluded.
Africa experience
Excessive reliance on condoms to combat HIV/AIDS in
Africa was criticized in a book published last year. Helen Epstein, in
"The Invisible Cure: Africa, The West, And the Fight Against Aids,"
(Farrar, Straus, and Giroux), also had reserves about sexual abstinence
campaigns, but did admit the importance of changing sexual behavior.
In trying to find the causes of the high degree of
infections in Africa, researchers found that a relatively high proportion of
African men and women had simultaneous sexual relations with two or three
partners. Compared to serial monogamy more common in Western countries the
concurrent relationships greatly increase the risk of a rapid diffusion of
sexual diseases.
Epstein was highly critical of the AIDS campaigns run
by Western groups. Organizations such as Population Services International,
Family Health International and Marie Stopes International were first active in
population control efforts, she noted. In more recent years their activity in
campaigns promoting condom use resulted in publicity that in effect promoted
sexual activity, and in some cases "bordered on the misogynistic," Epstein
added.
The message was that casual sex was nothing to worry
about, so long as you used a condom. Apart from promoting behavior that only
fueled infections, Epstein also commented that often the campaigns clashed with
local sensibilities concerning decency and self-respect.
Changing behavior
Epstein also criticized the organizations and the
United Nations for playing down the role of infidelity in the spread of
HIV/AIDS. She recounted her experience at an international AIDS conference in
Bangkok, where researchers presenting evidence about the importance of fidelity
in preventing infection were "practically booed off the stage."
Another book published last year, "The AIDS
Pandemic: The Collision of Epidemiology With Political Correctness"
(Radcliffe Publishing), also pointed out the need to change sexual behavior,
instead of a wholesale reliance on condoms.
James Chin, professor of epidemiology at the
University of California at Berkeley, devoted a large part of his book to an
analysis of the numbers of HIV/AIDS sufferers, pointing out how often the
figures are vastly inflated.
Chin also argued that the fears of a large-scale
infection in the general population are unfounded, given that the sexual
behavior of most people does not lend itself to falling prey to HIV/AIDS. The
greatest risk of being infected is found among homosexuals and those who have
multiple and concurrent partners, he explained.
The positive contribution that religion can make in
changing sexual behavior was recognized in a RAND Corporation study published
last year. People who are HIV-positive and say religion is an important part of
their lives are likely to have fewer sexual partners and are less likely to
spread the virus, according to the study: "Religiosity, Denominational
Affiliation and Sexual Behaviors Among People with HIV in the U.S."
"Religiosity is an untapped resource in the whole
struggle against HIV and AIDS, and should be looked at more thoroughly,"
commented Frank Galvan, lead author of the study in the April 3 press release
accompanying the report.
Christian concept of sexuality
The Church's view about condoms does not, however,
base itself on to what extent it may help resolve health problems. Sexua lity,
explains No. 2332 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, affects all of the
human person, body and soul. It concerns affectivity, the capacity to love and
procreate, and forming communion with others.
Sexuality is truly human and personal when it is
integrated into the relationship of one person to another, a relationship that
is a complete and lifelong mutual gift of a man and a woman, the Catechism
observes (No. 2337).
Benedict XVI addressed the HIV/AIDS issue in a couple
of recent speeches made when receiving the credentials of new ambassadors. On
Dec. 13, in his address to Peter Hitjitevi Katjavivi from Namibia, the Pope
recognized the urgent need to halt the spread of infections.
"I assure the people of your country that the
Church will continue to assist those who suffer from AIDS and to support their
families," the Pope stated.
The Church's contribution to the goal of eradicating
AIDS, the Pontiff continued, "cannot but draw its inspiration from the
Christian conception of human love and sexuality." This vision sees
marriage as a total, reciprocal and exclusive communion of love between a man
and a woman, Benedict XVI explained.
The same day, in a speech to Elizabeth Ya Eli Harding,
Gambia's new ambassador to the Holy See, the Pope stated that while medicine
and education have a part to play in combating HIV/AIDS: "Promiscuous
sexual conduct is a root cause of many moral and physical ills and must be
overcome by promoting a culture of marital faithfulness and moral
integrity."