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  4. How to Properly Put on a Male Condom

A condom works and feels great if you learn to put on and remove it properly. With practice, you can put a condom on in a few seconds. When used consistently and correctly, male condoms can be up to 98% effective in preventing the transmission of sexually transmitted.

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Male Condom Use, Fact Sheets and Condom Shopping Guide

Use this handy shopping guide as a reminder of what to look for when buying condoms and lubricants.

Always be sure to choose:
[X] Latex or polyurethane, including the female condom
[X] Disease prevention claim on package label

Also consider:
[ ] With lubricant
[ ] Separate lubricant (Select only water-based lubricants made for this purpose.)

Male Condom Use

Male Condom Use Fact Sheet

pdfMale Condom Use Fact Sheets

pdfMale Condom Use Fact Sheets Spanish

Male Condom Use and Fact Sheets

The Right Way To Use A Male Condom

Condom Dos and Don’ts

  • DO use a condom every time you have sex.
  • DO put on a condom before having sex.
  • DO read the package and check the expiration date.
  • DO make sure there are no tears or defects.
  • DO store condoms in a cool, dry place.
  • DO use latex or polyurethane condoms.
  • DO use water-based or silicone-based lubricant to prevent breakage.
  • DON’T store condoms in your wallet as heat and friction can damage them.
  • DON’T use nonoxynol-9 (a spermicide), as this can cause irritation.
  • DON’T use oil-based products like baby oil, lotion, petroleum jelly, or cooking oil because they will cause the condom to break.
  • DON’T use more than one condom at a time.
  • DON’T reuse a condom.

How To Put On and Take Off a Male Condom

Carefully open and remove condom from wrapper.

Place condom on the head of the erect, hard penis. If uncircumcised, pull back the foreskin first.

Pinch air out of the tip of the condom.

Unroll condom all the way down the penis.

After sex but before pulling out, hold the condom at the base. Then pull out, while holding the condom in place.

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Syphilis |  congenital syphilis prevention | chlamydia | gonorrhea | congenital gonorrhea prevention | STD | STI | sexually transmitted infection | sexually transmitted disease | testing | infant | infection | Medicine | Health | Cure | Pain | Doctor | Antibiotic | symptoms | signs | genitals | mouth | treatment | sore throat | lymph nodes | oral sex | vaginal sex | anal sex | Sexually Transmitted Disease

It's important to use condoms (rubbers, prophylactics) to help reduce the spread of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). These diseases include the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or HIV (the virus that causes AIDS), chlamydia, genital herpes, genital warts, gonorrhea, hepatitis B, and syphilis. You can get them through having sex -- vaginal, anal, or oral.

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