Female Condom
What is a female condom?
The female condom is a 7-inch polyurethane pouch that is
inserted into the vagina. It is a barrier method of birth
control. It can also protect women against several sexually
transmitted diseases (STDs).
How is it used?
There is a flexible ring at the closed end of the thin,
soft pouch. A slightly larger ring is at the open end. The
ring at the closed end holds the condom in place in the
vagina. The ring at the open end rests outside the vagina
against the labia (genital folds of the vulva). When the
condom is in place during sexual intercourse, there is no
contact of the vagina and cervix with the skin of the penis
or with secretions from the penis.
The female condom can be inserted up to 8 hours before sex.
Follow these instructions for inserting it:
- Find a comfortable position. Three possible positions
are:
- standing with one foot on a chair
- squatting with your knees apart
- lying down with your legs bent and knees apart.
- Hold the female condom with the open end hanging down.
Squeeze the inner ring with your thumb and middle finger.
- Holding the inner ring squeezed together, insert the ring
into the vagina and push the inner ring and pouch into
the vagina past the pubic bone up to the cervix.
When the condom is properly inserted, the outer ring will
hang down slightly outside the vagina.
During sex, it may be helpful to use your hand to guide the
penis into the vagina inside the female condom. The condom
is lubricated. However, if the condom seems to be sticking
to and moving with the penis rather than resting in the
vagina, stop and add more lubricant to the inside of the
condom (near the outer ring) or to the penis.
To remove the female condom after intercourse:
- Squeeze and twist the outer ring to keep the semen inside
the pouch.
- Pull the female condom out gently and throw it away in
the garbage. Do not flush it down the toilet.
Do not reuse female condoms. Use a new one every time you
have intercourse. Also, do not use male and female condoms
at the same time. Be careful not to tear the condom with
fingernails or sharp objects.
What are the benefits?
- The female condom protects against pregnancy about as well
as a diaphragm. Its failure rate with typical use is
21%. With perfect use the failure rate is 5%.
- The female condom gives women a way to help protect
themselves against some sexually transmitted diseases.
As is true of latex and polyurethane condoms for men,
neither the AIDS virus (HIV) nor the hepatitis B virus
can pass through the female condom.
- The polyurethane is less likely to cause an allergic
reaction than a male latex condom.
- The female condom is less likely to break or tear than a
male condom.
- You can buy female condoms at the drugstore without a
prescription.
- The female condom may be inserted up to 8 hours before
sex, so its use does not have to interrupt love-making.
- The female condom provides an opportunity for women to
share responsibility for the use of condoms with their
partners.
What are the disadvantages?
- Each female condom can be used just once and costs $2.50
to $5.00.
- The outer ring may hang loosely outside the vagina and
make it a little harder for the man to insert his penis.
- Like the male condom, the female condom does not provide
complete protection against all STDs. Infections can be
transmitted by organisms on areas of the skin that are
not covered by the condom. For example, the condom does
not provide reliable protection against the herpes
simplex virus or the venereal wart virus.
- It can have a high failure rate.
- It makes crackling and popping noises during intercourse.
Developed by RelayHealth (Instructions for using the female condom were obtained with permission from The Contraception Report, Patient Update, Vol. V, No. 6.)
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2006-11-24
Last reviewed: 2006-09-22
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2008 RelayHealth and/or one of its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.