Male Birth Control Howard Beach NY

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Housing Works
(718) 827-8700
2640 Pitkin Ave
Brooklyn, NY
Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center
(718) 240-6421
Brookdale Family Care Center 2554 Linden Blvd.
Brooklyn, NY
East New York Diagnostic & Treatment Center
(718) 240-0400
2094 Pitkin Ave.
Brooklyn, NY
AIDS Center Program
Family Services Network of New York 1420 Bushwick Ave Suite A-2
Brooklyn, NY
Samaritan Village
(718) 206-2000
138-02 Queens Blv
Briarwood, NY
Dr. Betty Shabazz Health Center
(718) 277-8303
Community Healthcare Network 999 Blake Ave
Brooklyn, NY
Outreach Project, Inc.
(718) 847-9233
11711-15 Myrtle Ave.
Richmond Hill, NY
Woodhull Hospital
760 Broadway Rm. 2ta314
Brooklyn, NY
Addiction Research and Treatment Corporation(ARTC)
(718) 345-5448
494 Dumont Ave.
Brooklyn, NY
AIDS Ambulatory Care Unit
Bushwick Health Center 1420 Bushwick Ave
Brooklyn, NY
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The Latest on Male Birth Control

In the past, responsibility for contraception has fallen primarily on women. Although women have many options, each form of birth control varies in how convenient and effective it is, and how it affects a woman's health.

Today, many men also want to control their own fertility and take an active role in preventing unplanned pregnancies. Despite advances in female contraception, abortion and teen pregnancy rates are still high, and about half of all pregnancies worldwide are unwanted or unplanned. Male contraception options can significantly influence birth rates in developing countries. Fortunately, many researchers are developing new methods for male contraception.

Currently, there are three birth control options for men: withdrawal, which has a 27 percent failure rate; vasectomy, which is permanent; and condoms, which can fail and produce pregnancy rates as high as 15 percent.

On the horizon

There are general three approaches to new contraceptive development.

1.       Hormonal methods, which, like the birth control pill for women, can have unintended consequences

2.       Non-hormonal but systematic methods that affect the whole body

3.       Non-systemic methods, which specifically target sperm

All approaches work by somehow inhibiting sperm production, motility or its interaction with a woman's eggs. Most of the development and progress in male birth control is in the third category.

Non-systemic methods in development

Vas-based. The vas deferens is a tube that passes sperm from the testes, where it's produced, to the penis. Unlike a vasectomy, which permanently severs the vas deferens, vas-based contraception methods are temporary. For example, a procedure called RISUG, Reversible Inhibition of Sperm Under Guidance, uses a polymer inserted into the vas to kill sperm. When a man no longer has a need for birth control, his physician flushes the polymer out of his system. Scientists have had good results in clinical trials with RISUG.

Other vas-based methods include implants, plugs and injections that provide a barrier to, or kill, sperm.

Heat-based. Heat affects fertility in men. Researchers have developed ways to use heat to temporarily render a man infertile. For example, ultrasound is simple, convenient and temporary, and is the most promising heat-based forms of birth control. In other studies, heating the testes with water ren...

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