Female control of sexuality: illusion or reality? Use of vaginal products in South west Uganda.

dc.contributor.author Green, Gill
dc.contributor.author Pool, Robert
dc.contributor.author Harrison, Susan
dc.contributor.author Hart, Graham J.
dc.contributor.author Wilkinson, Joanie
dc.contributor.author Nyanzi, Stella
dc.contributor.author Whitworth, James A. G.
dc.date.accessioned 2014-12-12T11:43:00Z
dc.date.available 2014-12-12T11:43:00Z
dc.date.issued 2001
dc.description.abstract This paper reports on a trial of vaginal products that were distributed and used by 131 women and 21 men in south west Uganda. It focuses specifically upon the issue of female control in heterosexual relationships and examines whether methods which are ostensibly under women’s control, will in practice give women greater control of their sexual health. Participants were invited to select two from a range of vaginal products that included the female condom, contraceptive sponge, film, tablets, foam and gel, and use each for five weeks and their favourite product for a further three months. They were interviewed up to seven times over a five-month period. Although the women perceived that a major advantage of the products (with the exception of the female condom) was that they could be used secretly, less than 40% were using the products without their partner’s knowledge after one week and this proportion declined over time with only 22% using the products secretly after ten weeks. In the main male partners were told as women felt it their duty to inform them. In general the women were very much more positive about the products than they were about the male condom, as were the men. A contributory factor to their popularity among women was the greater control they gave them. Even though, use of these products in practice often involved negotiation with male partners, the fact that use was contingent on women’s action was empowering and increased somewhat their ability to control their sexual health. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship 1. Social Studies project of the Medical Research Council Programme on AIDS in Uganda. 2. Medical Research Council Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, Glasgow, United Kingdom. en_US
dc.identifier.citation Gree, G., Pool, R., Harrison, S., Nyanzi, S., (2001) Female control of sexuality: illusion or reality? Use of vaginal products in South west Uganda. Social Science and Medicine, 52(4) 585-598. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10570/4114
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Elsevier Science Ltd. en_US
dc.subject Female control en_US
dc.subject Sexuality en_US
dc.subject Sexual pleasure en_US
dc.subject Vaginal viruscides en_US
dc.subject Vaginal microbicies en_US
dc.subject Female controlled products en_US
dc.subject Secrecy en_US
dc.subject Female condom en_US
dc.subject Sexual empowerment en_US
dc.subject Sexual and reproductive health en_US
dc.title Female control of sexuality: illusion or reality? Use of vaginal products in South west Uganda. en_US
dc.type Journal article en_US
Files