2012
DOI: 10.1007/s12610-012-0185-4
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Attitudes towards the male contraceptive pill: psychosocial and cultural explanations for delaying a marketable product

Abstract: Even though years of research on the male contraceptive pill have been conducted, a marketable product is still absent from the arsenal of male and female products of contraception. In this paper the following psychosocial and cultural factors have been elicited from the literature in order to reveal explanations for this delay: acceptability, trust, fear of side-effects, perceptions of contraceptive responsibility and fear of losing connotations of masculinity. Regardless of cultural variation, overall there … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The lack of knowledge in France regarding forms of male contraception and their mode of administration has already been identified [ 6 , 38 ] as a major obstacle to implementation and acceptability, and this study highlights the importance of information regarding this subject in both general and medical literature.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…The lack of knowledge in France regarding forms of male contraception and their mode of administration has already been identified [ 6 , 38 ] as a major obstacle to implementation and acceptability, and this study highlights the importance of information regarding this subject in both general and medical literature.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…A significant gap is apparent in the initial training of contraceptive specialists (gynaecologists) and primary care physicians represented by general practitioners. These results allow us to highlight one of the important general constraints of the dissemination of information regarding male contraception [ 6 ], especially for TMC, which is the lack of knowledge and therefore the lack of propagation by prescribers.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…LARCs are likely to face particular kinds of resistance that condoms do not engender, since the purpose of LARCs is to reduce the fertility of a man. For many men, "virility" is strongly connected to masculinity, which is often a fiercely-defended identity [62].…”
Section: Men Would Not Use Larcsmentioning
confidence: 99%