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Posted: Thu Sep 11, 2014 4:13 pm
Male Birth Control, Without Condoms, Will Be Here by 2017 September 9th, 2014 Samantha Allen
"Vasalgel, a reversible, non-hormonal polymer that blocks the vas deferens, is about to enter human trials. How will rhetoric change when male bodies become responsible for birth control?
Vasalgel, a reversible form of male birth control, just took one step closer to your vas deferens.
According to a press release from the Parsemus Foundation, a not-for profit organization focused on developing low-cost medical approaches, Vasalgel is proving effective in a baboon study. Three lucky male baboons were injected with Vasalgel and given unrestricted sexual access to 10 to 15 female baboons each. Despite the fact that they have been monkeying around for six months now, no female baboons have been impregnated. With the success of this animal study and new funding from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Parsemus Foundation is planning to start human trials for Vasalgel next year. According to their FAQ page, they hope to see it on the market by 2017 for, in their words, less than the cost of a flat-screen television.
So how does Vasalgel work? It is essentially a reimagining of a medical technology called RISUG (reversible inhibition of sperm under guidance) that was developed by a doctor named Sujoy Guha over 15 years ago in India, where it has been in clinical trials ever since. Unlike most forms of female birth control, Vasalgel is non-hormonal and only requires a single treatment in order to be effective for an extended period of time. Rather than cutting the vas deferens—as would be done in a vasectomy—a Vasalgel procedure involves the injection of a polymer contraceptive directly into the vas deferens. This polymer will then block any sperm that attempt to pass through the tube. At any point, however, the polymer can be flushed out with a second injection if a man wishes to bring his sperm back up to speed.
Unlike most forms of female birth control, Vasalgel is non-hormonal and only requires a single treatment in order to be effective for an extended period of time.
The Parsemus Foundation’s messaging on Vasalgel has focused on making the technology appealing to men. In a New York Times op-ed published this year, Elaine Lissner of the Parsemus Foundation pitches the product to “a 20-something or 30-something man, out on the dating market” who is worried about the effectiveness of the pill, given how many women forget to take pills during any given cycle. This pitch, too, is a plea for help. The Parsemus Foundation has to rely on donations and crowdfunding in order to bring male birth control to the market. Long-term treatments like Vasalgel are much less appealing to potential funders in the pharmaceutical industry who, as they observe, would much rather “sell pills to men’s partners every month.” Why sell a flat-screen television to a man, after all, when you can rent one to a woman for a decade?
In other words, the medical industry’s investment in the multibillion-dollar female birth control industry might block men’s access to male birth control just as effectively as Vasalgel would block their sperm. But a contraceptive polymer like Vasalgel would be a major medical innovation for more than just the man about town looking to copulate without consequence. In fact, male birth control could be the next major medical advance in women’s health, as strange as that idea seems.
If the use of polymer contraceptives were to become widespread, male birth control would completely transform the ways in which we understand sexual and reproductive health. Ever since men started wrapping animal intestines around their penises hundreds of years ago, we have been approaching birth control as a way of temporarily preventing fertilization inside a woman’s body. But what if we haven’t been able to see the forest through the ovaries? What if we could use polymer contraceptives like Vasalgel to block sperm at the source, rather than implementing expensive, convoluted, and potentially harmful contraceptive countermeasures inside women’s bodies?
If Vasalgel were to become as widespread and inexpensive as the Parsemus Foundation expects, unintended pregnancies could be substantially reduced. According to the Center for Disease Control, nearly half of pregnancies in the United States are unintended. That figure rises to 80 percent of all pregnancies among women age 19 and younger, and to 90 percent below age 15. The physical, financial, and emotional toll of an unintended pregnancy can be immense. As a report from the Guttmacher Institute notes, the average cost of an abortion is $485, which “pose a major financial burden for women seeking these services,” who are often lower income. Not all unintended pregnancies are unwanted, however, and given the fact that modern birth control has deep roots in Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger’s belief in eugenics, the benefits of male birth control for lower-income families in particular should not be overemphasized.
Even if we set the prevention of unintended pregnancies aside, however, the potentially deleterious side effects of female birth control are enough to justify the implementation of Vasalgel on their own. As WomensHealth.Gov notes, side effects of the birth control pill include an increased risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, blood clots, nausea, irregular bleeding, and depression. Less common methods of contraception like diaphragms and sponges can cause the rare and life-threatening toxic shock syndrome (TSS). Injections like Depo-Provera can cause bone loss and the use of intrauterine devices (IUDs) can potentially cause rips or tears in the uterus itself. It would take a commercial announcer a full minute of speed-reading to list off all the risks of every form of female birth control. Interrupting ovulation and fertilization is a complex process that requires a degree of hormonal regulation, often impacting other areas of a woman’s health.
What if we could use polymer contraceptives like Vasalgel to block sperm at the source, rather than implementing expensive and potentially harmful contraception inside women’s bodies?
But as luck would have it, you don’t have to tamper with testosterone in order to block sperm. It might seem as if men are unstoppable sperm machines, especially given the fact they produce 1,500 of them per second. But because sperm are as fickle as they are plentiful, technologies like Vasalgel and RISUG need not interfere with the production of sperm itself in the same way that female birth control often interferes with ovulation. Like the Little Dutch Boy walking by a dike on the brink of bursting, Vasalgel can simply plug up the vas deferens and stop an entire sea of sperm from crashing through. It promises to be a parsimonious solution to the age-old problem of preventing unwanted pregnancies. This is nothing short of Occam’s razor for your testicles.
While the way Vasalgel works inside a man’s body might be simple, its cultural impact would be complex. The Religious Right, in particular, has grown accustomed to a world in which regulating access to birth control means regulating women’s bodies, rather than men’s bodies. Although the Affordable Care Act began offering women no-to-low-cost contraceptive coverage in 2010, the Supreme Court’s now-infamous Hobby Lobby ruling this summer allowed “closely-held corporations” to offer health insurance plans without contraceptive coverage. The Hobby Lobby ruling is already being used to try to undermine Obamacare’s contraceptive requirement altogether. This week, Missouri state Representative Paul Wieland’s lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services went to the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The court will consider whether or not it is constitutional for “closely-held corporations” to be able to opt out of contraceptive coverage while states like Missouri cannot.
If Vasalgel became popular and affordable enough to surpass female birth control, it would put the Religious Right’s opposition to contraception to the test.
Lost in all of this legal conflict, however, is the fact that Hobby Lobby, of course, still covers vasectomies. But what if vasectomies were cheap, non-invasive, fully reversible, and as widespread as the female birth control pill? Would businesses like Hobby Lobby begin to object to them? If Vasalgel became popular and affordable enough to surpass female birth control, it would put the Religious Right’s opposition to contraception to the test. As The New York Times reported in 2012, many on the Religious Right justify their opposition to some forms of birth control by equating them with abortion because they “prevent the implantation of a fertilized egg in the uterus.” But if men’s bodies became the primary site for birth control, would religious leaders shift their rhetoric and take issue with a technology like Vasalgel on the grounds that it prevents life on a massive scale? Or do debates about life only have meaning when they take place over women’s bodies?
If the Parsemus Foundation’s optimistic timeline for the release of Vasalgel holds true, we may be forced to confront these questions sooner than expected. In the meantime, men, prepare for the possibility that you may soon take over primary responsibility for contraception from your wife or girlfriend. The future of birth control is coming and soon it might be inside of you." http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/09/09/we-ll-have-male-birth-control-by-2017.html
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Posted: Mon Sep 15, 2014 11:17 am
There's one thing I don't understand. What happens to the sperm? Is the sperm production halted by this block? Or do does the production continue regardless?
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Posted: Mon Sep 15, 2014 1:08 pm
Little-Lenah There's one thing I don't understand. What happens to the sperm? Is the sperm production halted by this block? Or do does the production continue regardless? Sperm will still be produced, but the tube that carries it away will be blocked so that it won't be able to leave the man's body. When sperm can't leave a man's body, the sperm just gets broken down and reabsorbed by his body. The block can also be removed later on if the man and his partner decide that they want to try to get pregnant.
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Posted: Mon Sep 15, 2014 4:22 pm
LorienLlewellyn Little-Lenah There's one thing I don't understand. What happens to the sperm? Is the sperm production halted by this block? Or do does the production continue regardless? Sperm will still be produced, but the tube that carries it away will be blocked so that it won't be able to leave the man's body. When sperm can't leave a man's body, the sperm just gets broken down and reabsorbed by his body. The block can also be removed later on if the man and his partner decide that they want to try to get pregnant. Wow, I didn't realized that that's what happened to sperm. If this male birth control actually makes it to the market, I'll be really happy
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Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2014 3:11 am
And there's no way to do this other than a shot to the nuts? Think I'll stick with condoms.
... ... ... Can a guy that gets that still even bust anyway? >_>
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Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2014 7:50 am
Asher2501 And there's no way to do this other than a shot to the nuts? Think I'll stick with condoms. ... ... ... Can a guy that gets that still even bust anyway? >_> As of right now, it sounds like a shot is the only way to get this block in place. And that does sound pretty painful. But it's actually probably a pretty minor and temporary pain, especially when you consider 1. the long-term pain or discomfort that some birth control methods cause for some women 2. the fact that after a vasectomy guys are usually up, about, and doing all their normal stuff in less than a week, and the shot is probably as invasive or less invasive than that and 3. if it's really painful or takes more than a minute or so to do, they will probably numb the area. This injectable block will likely be more effective and less expensive in the long-run than condoms. But the injectable block, like any birth control method, isn't right for everyone and will not protect against STDs. So some guys might opt for the injectable block, some might opt for condoms, some might opt for both, and some might not use either. But even if it's not right for everyone, it's a pretty major breakthrough because it will be right for some people. And that means fewer accidental pregnancies, and it means that some women may be able to get off birth control methods that are giving them long-term negative side effects. Men who get the injectable block will still be able to orgasm, and they will probably still ejaculate. In a vasectomy, the clamp or the cut is done in such a way that it prevents sperm from going anywhere but it doesn't prevent the rest of the ejaculate from getting out. And sperm is actually only a small portion of what's ejaculated. I assume this injectable block will be placed in the same area as the vasectomy's clamp or cut and will therefore have a similar effect.
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Posted: Wed Jan 21, 2015 10:54 am
Personally with all the birth control going around, its understand to take this kind of time to put research into helping women get off of birth control and for us guys to take the birth control instead but yet what if we guys feel the same negative side effects as women did with birth control. For me i wouldn't use either besides i wouldn't give myself away to any women, it would be a women that i consider very special and that if the women agrees that i am very special to her. Besides that, i do agree that this is a good thing for this to happen because this may help women in the long run and the confidence to not have to take the birth control when their partner can do so in their place.
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Posted: Thu Jan 22, 2015 8:07 am
Dawn Mercer but yet what if we guys feel the same negative side effects as women did with birth control. There are hormonal methods of birth control and non-hormonal methods of birth control. Hormonal methods usually to have more side effects and more serious side effects. This injection is a one time thing that blocks the tube that sperm comes out of. It is non-hormonal and doesn't affect the body in other way. So it would probably have far few negative side effectives than most other forms of birth control. Dawn Mercer For me i wouldn't use either besides i wouldn't give myself away to any women, it would be a women that i consider very special and that if the women agrees that i am very special to her. Even if you wait for someone special, you'll still need to use some method of birth control unless you're both the same sex, unless a doctor told one or both of you that you're infertile, or unless you only plan on having sex a couple of times in your life (at least until your partner goes through menopause) and only when you want a baby. Because, special partner or not, most of us do not want and could not handle a baby every time we have sex!
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