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วันอังคารที่ 4 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2557
The future of safe sex?
The future of sex: can the female condom catch on second time around?
Once mocked as having the erotic appeal of a jellyfish, the female
condom is being reinvented as the next big thing in protective sex. In
the first article from new digital publication Mosaic, Emily Anthes
takes an in-depth investigation to see what chance it has of catching on
this time around.
In 1987, an American pharmaceutical executive called Mary Ann Leeper
flew to Copenhagen to get a first-hand look at what she thought might be
the world’s next great health innovation. She didn’t expect to find it
tucked away inside an old cigar box.
When she arrived at the old
farmhouse owned by Danish doctor and inventor Lasse Hessel, he opened
the door with a cigar in his mouth. Then he fetched the box. “Inside
were all these bits and pieces – metal, plastic, all different kinds of
stuff,” Leeper recalls. “I took a deep breath and thought, ‘Holy mother –
what have I gotten myself into?’” Somehow, these bits and pieces fit
together to form a contraption that women could wear during sex to
prevent pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections – the world’s
first female condom.
The presentation may have been
unconventional, but Leeper and her colleagues at Wisconsin Pharmacal had
high hopes for Hesse’s invention. “The Aids crisis in the United States
was just fully being recognised, and it was clear to us that for women
to have a product that they could use to help protect themselves would
be a good thing,” Leeper says.
Indeed, when Wisconsin Pharmacal
finally introduced the female condom to the US in 1993, public health
experts hailed it as a game-changer. The condom, a polyurethane pouch
inserted into the vagina before sex, would protect women from sexually
transmitted infections even if their male partners refused to wear
condoms.
Technically, the female condom works. When used
correctly, it reduces a woman’s risk of contracting HIV by around 94–97%
each time she had sex, according to estimates. Studies show that making
female condoms available alongside the male version increases the
percentage of sexual acts that are protected, and decreases the
prevalence of sexually transmitted infections.
Yet, two decades
after its much-celebrated introduction, the female condom still isn’t
living up to its potential. Less intuitive and familiar than the male
condom, the device simply never caught on. Journalists mocked it,
clinicians ignored it, and women shunned it, claiming that the condom
was aesthetically unappealing and technically difficult to master.
Today, only 1.6% of all condoms distributed worldwide are female
condoms.
There may finally be an opening to change the female
condom’s fate. For years, a handful of researchers, engineers and
entrepreneurs have been quietly tinkering with the device. Their efforts
are now maturing and an assortment of redesigned and reinvented female
condoms are beginning to make their way onto the market. The
introduction of new, more user-friendly products – coupled with renewed
efforts to promote the technology around the globe – may finally be
positioning the female condom for a breakthrough. Barrier protection
From
the start, the female condom was a difficult project – far more
difficult than Leeper had bargained for. After buying the rights to the
technology, Leeper and her colleagues at Wisconsin Pharmacal needed to
turn Hessel’s prototype into a marketable product. After some tweaking,
they ended up with a thin polyurethane pouch with a flexible ring at
each end. A woman would insert the device by squeezing the ring that
sits in the closed end of the pouch and pushing it into her vagina. Once
expanded inside the vagina, this inner ring would keep the condom in
place. The larger ring at the open end of the pouch would sit outside
the vagina, covering the external genitalia. When a man ejaculated, the
internal condom pouch would trap his semen, preventing pregnancy and
sexually transmitted infections.
But before Wisconsin Pharmacal
could put the condom on the market, they needed approval from the US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Because the female condom was an
utterly new kind of product, the FDA decided to regulate it as a Class
III medical device, a category that is generally reserved for
“high-risk” medical equipment – such as pacemakers and certain lasers –
and that requires the highest level of regulatory scrutiny. (The FDA
classifies male condoms as Class II medical devices, so they are subject
to fewer controls and don't require pre-market approval.)
The femidom is much bigger than male condoms but can be more difficult to apply (Science Photo Library)
It took six years for the female condom to wind its way
through the regulatory system, and when the government finally approved
it, in 1993, Leeper breathed a sigh of relief. “I thought that the
hardest part was going to be getting it through FDA because it was
really difficult and they kept changing the specifications, the
requirements, the clinical studies,” she says. But she was wrong. The
hard part was just beginning.
As Wisconsin Pharmacal prepared to
launch the Reality female condom in the US (it would go by other brand
names in other countries), they made all the standard arrangements,
hiring sales reps to visit medical practices and commissioning a big
advertising firm to market the product directly to consumers. “We did
all the checklist things that you’re supposed to do,” Leeper says. “And
we fell flat on our face.”
The challenge, in part, was the era,
and the public’s squeamishness about a sex-related product. “In those
days, you couldn’t talk ‘condom’ out loud,” Leeper recalls. “Male
condoms were referred to as ‘rubbers’. You said them in a whisper and
they were held behind the counter by the pharmacist.” And although the
Aids crisis was raging, for many American women, the risk of contracting
HIV was abstract, something that happened to other people and not to
them. While women in focus groups had said they liked the idea
of the condom, according to Leeper, “when push came to shove, when they
were in that bedroom, the female condom was out on the dining-room
table”.
There were other barriers, too. The condoms cost as much
as $5 a piece, compared to male condoms, which can typically be had for
$1 or less. Krissy Ferris recalls hearing about female condoms when she
was a student at Oberlin College in Ohio, but the price was a deterrent.
“I didn’t actually try one until I got free samples,” recalls Ferris,
who now works at a medical practice in Cleveland, Ohio. “Am I going to
buy $6 worth of condoms to try this out a couple times? It seems like
maybe not. You’re getting male condoms for free everywhere when you’re
in your 20s.” Scream test
What’s more, the
female condom was, frankly, strange. Unlike the male condom, which is
sold rolled up and compressed, the female condom came fully open. Women
and men alike were turned off by the unfamiliar, big, plastic-bag-like
device they found when they undid the packet. Though some women did
eventually come to like the condoms, there was a definite learning curve
and as many as one-third to one-half of women had difficulty inserting
them. Once in place, the condom had a tendency to squeak or rustle
during sex.
The media pounced on these complaints, and utterly
skewered the female condom. They ridiculed its aesthetics with seemingly
limitless creativity. As sociologist Amy Kaler recounts in her 2004
paper on the condom’s introduction, journalists compared the product to:
“a jellyfish, a windsock, a fire hose, a colostomy bag, a Baggie,
gumboots, a concertina, a plastic freezer bag, something to line
Boston’s Inner Harbor with, a cross between a test tube and a rubber
glove, Edvard Munch’s The Scream, something designed for a female
elephant, something out of the science-fiction cartoon The Jetsons, a
raincoat for a Slinky toy, or a ‘contraption used to punish fallen
virgins in the Dark Ages.’”
The original Danish-designed female condom has led to range of products (Phil Coomes/BBC)
Though the media treatment was especially harsh, journalists
“were picking up on what were genuine design issues of the first
generation of the female condom,” says Kaler, an assistant professor at
the University of Alberta in Canada. “It wasn’t the most beautiful thing
in the world. It was easy to make fun of. It was kind of laughed out of
existence before it really got a chance to take off.”
Still,
there were signs that Wisconsin Pharmacal was onto something. In 1995,
two years after bringing the condom to market, Leeper got a call from an
official at Zimbabwe’s Ministry of Health and Child Welfare. The health
worker had received a petition demanding that the government of
Zimbabwe bring the female condom into the country. It had been signed by
30,000 women.
Though Leeper had initially envisioned selling the
female condom in America’s private sector, the call from Zimbabwe,
coupled with the condom’s poor reception in the US, prompted the company
to shift course.
International nonprofit groups and aid
organisations have long been big buyers of male condoms. The United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the US Agency for International
Development, Population Service International and others regularly
purchase male condoms in bulk and then donate them – or sell them at a
deeply subsidised price – to clinics and programmes that serve
particularly high-risk populations.
In 1996, Wisconsin Pharmacal
changed its name to the Female Health Company and began to focus on this
global public sector, working with governments, global health
organisations and aid agencies to get the condoms into the hands of
at-risk women in low-income countries. The female condom became a
particularly important tool in several countries in sub-Saharan Africa,
where, in the early 2000s, 60% of new HIV diagnoses were made in women,
who often contracted the virus through their long-term partners. Sexual revolution
Patience
Kunaka, who was teaching nursing and midwifery students in Zimbabwe
when she first heard about female condoms, knew these risks all too
well. Two of her cousins had died of Aids-related causes, and three
additional family members were infected with HIV. Like many other women,
she was not initially impressed by the female condom. “When I first saw
one my immediate reaction was, ‘Wow! How does it remain inside with
penile movement?’” she recalls. “I thought it would be sliding in and
out and what a messy act! I also thought the plastic would crumble
inside me causing discomfort.”
Sexual education in developing countries is promoting the use of female condoms (Science Photo Library)
But Kunaka suspected her partner at the time of being
unfaithful and was – in her own words – “obsessed about sexual hygiene”,
so she decided to give the female condom a shot. It didn’t go well at
first. “I had problems inserting it and felt discomfort from the inner
ring,” she says. Slowly, after some practice, she got the hang of it.
Kunaka even came to like the device, especially “the fact that I don’t
have to beg my partner to use a condom”.
She became a
female-condom convert. “In my African context, where men are at liberty
to have as many partners as they can have, they give me power to
negotiate for safer sex,” she says. She even went on to get a job as the
condoms and training manager for Population Service International
Zimbabwe, and now spends her days spreading the word about female
condoms to men and women throughout the country.
The female condom
received a better reception in Africa than it had in the US, and as the
Female Health Company sought to expand its global reach, it tweaked its
original product, switching from a polyurethane condom to one made of
nitrile, the same material used in many medical gloves. The nitrile
condom, called the FC2, is significantly cheaper than its polyurethane
predecessor, now commonly referred to as the FC1, and also less noisy
during sex. In 2007, the UNFPA ‘pre-qualified’ the FC2, making it
eligible for bulk purchasing by public-sector agencies, and between 2007
and 2010, the number of female condoms distributed globally doubled
from 25 million to 50 million.
Not bad for a contraceptive device that’s been likened to The Scream, but
it’s still a drop in the ocean compared to male condoms. For every
female condom that the major donor organisations purchase, they buy 71
male condoms. And although female condoms have got cheaper, price
remains a limiting factor. An aid agency purchasing the FC2 in bulk will
pay anywhere from $0.55 to $0.88 per condom but can get male condoms
for as little as $0.02 a piece.
In many clinics in low-income
countries, the supply of female condoms can be inconsistent, and the
situation’s not much better in the private sector. While pharmacy
shelves overflow with male condoms of every imaginable kind – ribbed,
studded, ultrathin, warming, aloe-enriched, neon pink, glow-in-the-dark,
bubblegum-flavoured – it can be difficult to find female condoms for
sale at all.
In some places, the condoms are stigmatised, thanks
to clinical trials and distribution programmes that initially focused on
sex workers. Elsewhere, the devices are still saddled with the baggage
of the product’s first, failed introduction. In March 2013, for
instance, a writer for Jezebel, a popular feminist blog and news site,
published a post titled “Stop Trying to Make Female Condoms Happen”. She
expressed scepticism that “women will change their minds about wanting
to line their vaginas like a waste paper basket”, and concluded by
noting that “female condoms are just ew”.
More than two decades
after the first female condom hit the shelves, this is not exactly the
revolution that public health experts had in mind. Painful experience
For
nearly 40 years, Path, a global health nonprofit based in Seattle,
Washington, has been radically reinventing basic medical technologies.
The group’s designers and engineers, for instance, created the Uniject: a
disposable syringe pre-loaded with a single dose of vaccine. They built
a one-size-fits-all diaphragm, removing the need for women to visit a
doctor to have one specially fitted. And they invented a portable,
handheld scale that health workers can bring to home deliveries. The
scale requires no electricity, can be read in the dark, and is
decipherable even to birth attendants with low literacy, making it easy
to identify underweight infants.
In the late 1990s, Path turned
its attention to the female condom. “The Female Health Company did an
incredible thing,” says Maggie Kilbourne-Brook, a programme officer at
Path. “They created a product that had never existed, and they got it
approved, and they got it registered and marketed in more than 100
countries. They actually changed people’s perceptions of what barrier
protection could be.” But as it became apparent that the condoms weren’t
quite living up to their potential, some experts began to think that
perhaps a radical makeover was in order. “In product development,” says
Kilbourne-Brook, “We always expect first-generation devices will need to
be improved.”
Path prides itself on its user-centred design
process, and so, in an effort to create a female condom that women would
want to use, those at Path decided to do something both radical and
obvious: consult actual women. In 1998, Path began convening focus
groups in four countries – South Africa, Thailand, Mexico and the US –
asking women and men what they thought about female condoms and what
they wanted from them.
From Durban to Seattle, it turns out that
users’ desires were pretty basic: “a product that was going to be easy
to use, easy to insert, stable during use", says Kilbourne-Brook. Plus,
“if it was possible, they wanted something that was more aesthetically
pleasing”.
Male condoms (top) make up more than 98% of the market at the moment (Science Photo Library)
These requests became the guiding principles for the designers
and engineers working at Path’s product development laboratory in
Seattle. The team ran an iterative, multi-step design process, building
prototypes of potential new condoms in the lab and then sending them out
to heterosexual volunteers in each of the four countries. These women
and men handled and examined each model, sharing their impressions with
researchers, and couples received samples of some of the more advanced
prototypes to try out in their bedrooms. The product designers used the
feedback to refine – and sometimes utterly rethink – their designs and
then sent new, tweaked models back for further testing.
Early
generations of female condoms had relied on a ring-based design. One of
Path’s first prototypes was similar, with a polyurethane pouch anchored
between two fixed rings. But some women reported that it was difficult
to push the inner ring into the vagina – the same complaint often made
about the FC1 and FC2 – and that it was painful once inside. “Device is
stable but uncomfortable,” one Mexican tester reported. So Path decided
to scrap the rings entirely. They briefly tested a prototype that could
be inserted using a tampon tube applicator, but the condom didn’t deploy
reliably.
They spent a lot of time talking about how to improve
insertion. “We know from a user perspective, if you have a difficult
time the very first time you try to use a device, a woman may never come
back,” says Kilbourne-Brook. “We wanted this to be not only easy to
use, but it needed to be easy to use for someone who’s never used it
before.”
According to Kilbourne-Brook, the ultimate breakthrough
was inspired by feedback from testers and researchers in Thailand, who
said, “Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you had some kind of insertion device
that helped you insert it and then it got out of the way?” Radical redesign
By
2003, they had hit on the solution: a dissolving applicator. The
engineers created a condom that looked like a funnel, with a thin sheet
of polyurethane that narrowed into a rounded tip. This tip contained the
main pouch of the condom, collapsed inside a dissolving capsule. To
insert the condom, women would simply push the capsule inside, much the
same way they’d insert a tampon. Once it came into contact with the
moisture of the vagina, the capsule would melt away – often within 30-60
seconds – releasing the full condom pouch.
The product designers
gave the condom stability by attaching four small, thin pieces of
polyurethane foam to the outside of the condom. Once the pouch expanded,
these foam pieces nestled up against the vaginal wall, keeping the
condom in place. Like other female condoms, the model also featured a
flexible outer ring to cover the external genitalia.
Between
November 2003 and January 2004, 60 couples received samples of this
prototype to try at home. They were impressed. Eighty-eight per cent of
the women said it was easy to insert and 97% said the pouch was stable
during sex. The vast majority of men and women asked said the condom was
comfortable, and 98% of women and 100% of men said it allowed for
satisfactory sensation during sex.
It had taken six years and more than 300 unique prototypes, but by early 2004, Path had found its female condom.
The
final product, which Path named the Woman’s Condom, is “just a
brilliant design,” says Kaler, who was not involved in its creation.
“When you look at it visually, it isn’t huge. It’s clear what you do
with it. And the way that it’s been designed with these foam pads means
that it doesn’t move around.”
A series of larger clinical trials –
conducted in Mexico, South Africa, Thailand, China and the US – has
reinforced what Path found in its initial testing, with users reporting
that the Woman’s Condom is comfortable, stable and easy to insert.
Several studies have found that both men and women tend to like the
Woman’s Condom better than the FC1 and FC2. Users’ main complaint was
that it does not come pre-lubricated, as the FC2 does. Instead, each
condom comes with a packet of lubricant that users can apply themselves.
In
2011, the Woman’s Condom received the stamp of approval from the
Shanghai Food and Drug Administration and is currently under review by
the UNFPA; approval is expected in 2014. In the meantime, limited
quantities are already being sold in China and South Africa. “Low-stress solution”
The
Woman’s Condom isn’t the only new female condom on the scene. In 2012,
the UNFPA pre-qualified the Cupid, which is manufactured by an Indian
condom company. The Cupid relies on a ring-shaped foam sponge tucked
into the closed end of the condom pouch for internal stability. Made of
natural latex, the Cupid may be the cheapest female condom yet, and is
now available for purchase in both the public and private sectors.
Several
other condoms, each slightly different in design, are currently under
UNFPA review. For instance, the Phoenurse, which is currently sold in
China, comes with an optional insertion stick. Then there’s the panty
condom, in which a condom pouch is affixed to a pair of reusable panties
with an opening over the vagina. Before sex, a woman can push the
condom inside with her finger – or a man can with his penis – without
her having to take off the undergarment.
Promoting the female condom in poorer countries has had more effect than in the US (Getty Images)
And there are still more designs in the early stages of
development. Origami Condoms, based in Los Angeles, California, has
developed a silicone female condom that unfolds like an accordion as
it’s pushed into the vagina. The company just completed a small phase I
acceptability study – overall, participants preferred the Origami condom
to the FC2, though they said the FC2 felt more stable during sex. The
company plans to conduct a larger clinical trial this year.
Not
every product will be right for every woman or couple, but that’s
precisely the point. “In the studies we’ve done, we’ve found that some
women will say, ‘I really love this one and I don’t like this one at
all’,” says Mags Beksinska, research director at the division of
maternal, adolescent and child health at the University of the
Witwatersrand, South Africa. “There are different aspects that appeal to
different women in the different designs. So it would be good if there
was a wider choice.”
Krissy Ferris, the woman who was initially
turned off by the cost of female condoms, came to see their advantages
while dating a man who had trouble maintaining an erection with a male
condom. “It was definitely a barrier to male condom use, and I was not
ready to compromise on using a barrier method,” she says. The female
condom was a “low-stress” solution.
Over the years, Ferris has
tried several different products, including the FC1, the FC2 and the VA
w.o.w., which, like the Cupid, uses an internal sponge to hold the
condom pouch in place. Ferris found that she preferred the VA w.o.w.
because the sponge made it feel more secure during sex. “If you’re using
something with this desire for safety, having this extra measure of
security was definitely a positive for me,” she says. But the FC1 and
FC2 felt more natural, she acknowledged, and for some women, that may be
more important.
There is some evidence to suggest that women are
more likely to have safe sex – and less likely to become pregnant or
contract sexually transmitted infections – when a larger selection of
contraceptive and barrier products is available. Giving women a greater
choice in female condoms may increase the odds that they choose any
female condom at all.
Meanwhile, male condoms are also getting a
redesign. In November 2013, the Gates Foundation awarded 11 grants of
$100,000 to designers, engineers and scientists with ideas for a
“next-generation condom’”– male or female – that would be easier and
more pleasurable to use. The winning proposals include a male condom
that is packaged with a built-in applicator, allowing the condom to be
removed from its foil wrapper and donned in a single smooth motion, and a
one-size-fits-all male condom designed to tighten during sex. Practice makes perfect
Of
course, upgrading a product is merely a first step. While the FC1
certainly had its flaws, they weren’t the only reason that female
condoms didn’t take off. “Some technologies are harder than others,”
says Laura Frost, a partner at Global Health Insights, a research and
consulting firm. “Compared to other products where there’s one huge
issue, like affordability or awareness, this one had those barriers at
every stage.”
That’s why, for the female condom to truly break
through, advocates will need to invest in comprehensive marketing and
education campaigns at the local, national and global levels. “It takes
more than just putting it on the shelf,” says Susie Hoffman, an
associate professor of epidemiology at Columbia University in New York.
The Origami Condom unfurls like an accordion - and some users prefer it (Origami Condom)
Female condoms remain less straightforward than male condoms,
and one of the major lessons of the last two decades is that women often
need a little bit of training to use them correctly. That means that
clinicians and counsellors may have to do more than simply tell women
that female condoms exist – they’ll need to give them the opportunity to
practise inserting one, either on a pelvic model or on themselves.
In
addition, women may need help figuring out how to broach the subject
with their male partners. Though the condoms have won praise for being
female-initiated, they’re not entirely invisible, and most men will
notice if their partners are wearing them. “In many cases, she’s
probably going to want to mention to her partner before having sex that
this is a new product that she’s going to try,” Hoffman says. “Ideally
there’s going to be some kind of a conversation about it, and women need
help in figuring out how to do that.”
Male partners are also a
potential market. “Men probably feel, when it’s called the ‘female
condom’, that it’s not something that’s for them,” Mags Beksinska says.
But “there’s no reason that a man shouldn’t take one and bring it home
and introduce it to his partner”. In fact, she adds, once men get used
to the female condom, they often prefer it to the more constricting male
version. Female condoms even enhance sex for some people: the outer
ring can be used to stimulate the clitoris, while the inner ring of some
designs can bump up pleasurably against the tip of the penis.
The
female condom may remain a tough sell, but the good news, experts say,
is that there are now more organisations trying to make the pitch. “Now
we’re seeing a much bigger coalition of advocates, which is what we
need,” Frost says. Some existing agencies, most notably the UNFPA, have
stepped up their support, while champions have created a variety of new
advocacy and awareness groups, including the National Female Condom
Coalition in the US, and the Universal Access to Female Condoms Joint
Programme, based in the Netherlands. New support
Alongside
this, the condom’s supporters are getting more creative in their
promotion efforts, establishing Global Female Condom Day – the first one
was held on 12 September 2012 – and holding female-condom-themed
fashion shows and film festivals. Several organisations have turned
salons and barbershops in Zimbabwe, Malawi, Cameroon and elsewhere into
female condom distribution centres, training hairdressers to promote and
sell the product to both male and female clients. And all-out media
blitzes in Africa – in which the condoms are promoted on billboards,
television and the radio – have fed a sharp increase in demand.
“I
think people had kind of written off the female condom,” says Beth
Skorochod, a senior technical adviser at Population Service
International. “But now people are beginning to say, ‘Ok, with more
competition and more interest, maybe this deserves another look’.”
There
may even be hope for the hard-to-crack private sector in higher-income
countries. After winning FDA approval for the FC2 in 2009, the Female
Health Company relaunched the female condom in the US, creating female
condom campaigns and programmes in a handful of major American cities,
including New York, San Francisco and Washington, DC.
Female condoms may be more expensive, but they have a role to play in sexual health, supporters say (Getty Images)
Some local US groups are also beginning to lay the groundwork
for the future. Staff members at the Chicago Female Condom Campaign now
show off samples of some of the newest products – including the Cupid
and the Woman’s Condom – in their training and education sessions. The
goal is to make sure that healthcare providers and consumers will be
familiar with the products if and when they appear in the US. But
there’s an added benefit. “Frankly what this also does is it helps to
cultivate new female condom advocates,” says Jessica Terlikowski, who
coordinates the Chicago Female Condom Campaign and the National Female
Condom Coalition. Seeing other products, she says, can prompt women to
ask, “‘How can I get that?’ ‘Why don’t we have that here?’ People can’t
ask for or demand what they don’t know about.”
Women may soon have
choices beyond the conventional condom. Scientists have been developing
interventions that would be truly invisible to women’s partners: oral
antiretroviral pills and vaginal gels that prevent HIV. Despite the
enormous excitement surrounding these drugs, they won’t be magic bullets
either, and the public-health community will still have to grapple with
the thorny issues of education, access and adherence. Earlier this
year, for instance, researchers announced that a clinical trial of two
different HIV prevention pills and one vaginal gel, conducted among
women in three African nations, failed because women weren’t using the
medications regularly.
Such outcomes are making it increasingly
obvious that the global fight against HIV and other sexually transmitted
infections is unlikely to be won with any one technology, no matter how
elegantly designed. Instead, it will require an arsenal of weapons, a
diverse array of tools that allow women and men to protect themselves.
The female condom may never be as cheap or as popular as the male
condom, but that doesn’t mean it has no role to play.
Among those
optimistic about the female condom’s future is Lasse Hessel, the Danish
doctor who started it all. The condom’s champions made some mistakes in
the early years, Hessel says, but he’s encouraged by the recent
resurgence of interest and the new products that are hitting the
shelves. In fact, he wishes other inventors had redesigned his condom
sooner, especially because there was so much room for improvement: “How
can my ugly, clumsy female condom get any worse?” Hessel says. “It can
only get much better.”
This article was originally commissioned by Mosaic, and reproduced under a Creative If you would like to comment on this, or anything else you have seen on Future, head over to our Facebook or Google+ page, or message us on Twitter.
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