South African men have two contraceptive choices: male condoms and vasectomies.
A 2016 national survey found that almost all men & women know about male condoms.
But a recent report shows a 1.2% decrease in the uptake of vasectomies at government hospitals between 2018 and 2019.
During the same time female sterilisation operations increased by 7%, even though vasectomies are easier and cheaper to do.
But why are fewer men using vasectomies? It might be due to fear or perhaps false information circulating about it.
To help you understand more about vasectomy, here are 3 myths you need to dispel.
Myth 1: “Vasectomies are just too painful”
Doctors take careful steps to make sure patients don’t feel pain when they get vasectomies. Physicians use local anaesthesia and numbing cream to cut how much pain people feel.
Men who feel being awake during the procedure is too much, can choose to be sedated.
In a British study of 600 men, guys ranked their pain 3.5 out of 10 on a pain measurement scale. Zero meant no pain and 10 is the worst possible pain.
Myth 2: “My sex life will get worse after having a vasectomy”
A vasectomy simply prevents sperm, which is made in the testes, from being delivered into a gland where semen is stored before a man has an orgasm.
Semen is a whitish fluid that keeps sperm cells alive after they leave the body.
Surgeons cut off the sperm supply by closing the sperm delivery cord called the vasdeferens. Men can still get erections and climax after vasectomies.
Sperm makes up less than 1% of semen, so vasectomies don’t change the amount of fluid men ejaculate.
Myth 3: A vasectomy can easily be reversed
Vasectomies are a permanent form of birth control.
Even though a reversal procedure exists, urologists say it’s a costly, time-consuming operation that requires highly specialised surgery.
South African law requires men to sign a form where you agree to having the procedure by choice.
Research shows that men in their twenties or thirties are usually the ones who regret having a vasectomy or change their minds.
This is why the contraception rule book for health workers says men have to be counselled before getting a vasectomy, so that they understand the choice they’re making.