Most attention has focussed on controlling the HIV (AIDS) virus, but each STD presents a different situation.
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Note that most methods of contraception (birth control) other than the barrier methods mentioned above are not effective at preventing the spread of STDs.
The spermicide[?] Nonoxynol-9 has been claimed to reduce the likelihood of STD transmission, however more evidence is needed to verify this, and it cannot be recommended for this purpose at this time.
With the realization that risk of transmission of sexually transmitted diseases in various sexual activities is a continuum rather than a simple dichotomy of risky/safe, US health workers began to talk of "safer sex" rather than "safe sex". However, in most other countries, including the United Kingdom, Australia and Germany, the term "safe sex" is still mainly used by sex educators, perhaps in the recognition that with the strict adherence to these techniques the risks of catching the more dangerous STDs are quite low.
Some conservatives object to the "safer sex" movement on the grounds that it promotes what they hold to be immoral behavior, namely sex outside of marriage. They believe that the best way to avoid sexual disease is abstinence before marriage followed by lifelong mutual fidelity thereafter.
In the U.S., Former United States Surgeon General Koop and some others have claimed that condoms are ineffective against HIV transmission during anal sex, holding that condoms are somewhat permeable to the tiny HIV virus. These claims have been disputed by medical researchers, who generally view correctly used condoms as effective protection. Some studies have shown that, even with the best of intentions, determined condom users sometimes forget to put them on before sex, so that the transmission rate remains disturbingly high. Advocates of safe sex education point out that it has to start at an early age to be effective, a notion which arouses even heavier opposition from conservatives given the taboo of child sexuality.
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