LABELS
USA Today
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2004-03-11-condom-labels_x.htm
Bush administration considering warning labels on condom packages
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush
administration is considering requiring warning labels on condom packages noting
that the contraceptive devices do not protect users from all sexually
transmitted diseases. Most recent studies indicate condoms do not safeguard
against human papillomavirus, or HPV, a little-known but widespread sexually
transmitted disease that, untreated, can cause genital warts or cervical cancer.
The FDA "has
developed a regulatory plan to provide condom users with a consistent labeling
message and the protection they should expect from condom use," Daniel G.
Schultz, director of the agency's Office of Device Evaluation, said Thursday.
The agency "is preparing new guidance on condom labeling to address these
issues," Schultz told members of a House Government Reform subcommittee.
Package labels now say that condoms, if properly used, reduce the risk of AIDS
and other sexually transmitted diseases. The labels are silent on the issue of
HPV. The question now is whether that statement needs to have any additional
information regarding protection against the cervical cancer virus - without
discouraging people from using condoms for AIDS protection.
The FDA has considered
warning labels since 2000, when President Clinton directed the agency to
re-examine whether information included in packages accurately reflected condom
effectiveness in preventing all sexually transmitted diseases, including HPV.
But some lawmakers feared that such labels could turn people away from using
condoms, thereby increasing the risk of contracting diseases such as AIDS,
chlamydia and gonorrhea. "Anything that undermines the effectiveness of
condoms for these uses will have serious public health consequences," said
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif. "Are condoms perfect? Of course not. But
reality requires us not to make a public health strategy against protection, but
rather to ask a key question: compared to what?" Some lawmakers
"insist that abstinence-only education is the solution to teen pregnancy
and sexually transmitted diseases because abstinence works each time,"
Waxman said. "Well, the evidence, however, indicates that abstinence-only
education works rarely, if at all."
Responded Rep. Jo Ann
Davis, R-Va.: "This is not about social ideology, or religious ideology.
It's about informing women. ... And truly, the only way to be protected is
abstinence. That's not ideology - it's fact." The White House wants to
double, to $270 million, federal spending on education programs to convince
young people that abstinence is the only certain way to prevent the spread of
sexually transmitted diseases. But an independent report for the government two
years ago indicated that no reliable evidence exists that abstinence programs
work.
More than 2 million
American women are infected with HPV each year, said Ed Thompson, deputy
director for public health services at the Centers for Disease Control. Ten
thousand women are diagnosed annually with cervical cancer, claiming 4,000
lives, Thompson said.
Copyright 2004 The Associated Press.