男性对避孕药具的接受程度与男性对避孕责任的接受程度

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-09-20 DOI:10.1111/andr.13719
Brian T. Nguyen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管新的男性避孕药具预计会产生影响,但用于开发这些药具的资源和投资仍然有限,部分原因是担心男性不会实际使用这些药具。在过去的 30 年中,已经进行了 30 多项研究--在地区和国际范围内、在临床试验中、在不同人群中--调查了男性和女性对新型男性避孕方法的态度,所有研究都一致表明,男性和女性对新型避孕方法感兴趣并愿意使用。然而,即使是这些研究,包括竞争性避孕药具市场预测,似乎也不足以令人信服。
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Male contraceptive acceptability versus male acceptance of contraceptive responsibility

Despite the projected impact of new male contraceptives, resources and investments directed at their development remain limited in part due to concerns that men would not actually use them. Now, more than 30 studies have been conducted over the last 30 years—regionally and internationally, within clinical trials, and across populations—examining men and women's attitudes towards new male contraceptive methods, all consistently demonstrating interest in and willingness to use new methods. Yet even these studies, inclusive of competitive contraceptive market projections, seem not to be convincing enough.

Rather than study whether men would be willing to use male contraceptives, more resources should be devoted to developing the infrastructure and supporting the cultural changes needed to ensure that when new male contraceptives inevitably emerge, that they will be disseminated quickly and made readily accessible.

Men's views on what their roles are in society, families, relationships, and pregnancy prevention are changing in ways that may impact what they consider to be acceptable contraceptive risks. As society moves toward more gender equitable beliefs, men's positive involvement in contraception might organically develop into an expected behavior. Interventions aimed at sensitizing men toward gender equitable beliefs may pay dividends in improving male contraceptive acceptability.

The current lack of a reversible male contraceptive method prevents us from collecting data that might disprove presumptions that men would be unwilling to take on responsibility for pregnancy prevention. However, studies of men's involvement in (1) over-the-counter emergency contraception, (2) vasectomy, and (3) abortion offer case studies for men's increasing consciousness of opportunities for shared contraceptive responsibility, the structural and sociopolitical barriers that men face when trying to participate in family planning, and how these might translate into new male contraceptive interest and development.

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CiteScore
7.20
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4.30%
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567
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