HABIT....Using
a condom should be a habit, like wearing a bike helmet.
EVER WONDER what it would be
like to sleep with a mean film director, a socialite or the guy who does the
voice-over in movie trailers, or perhaps with one of your Facebook friends?
As part of a new safe-sex
initiative, the Swedish Institute for Communicable Disease Control (SMI) has
launched an app called Provligget, or Test Nooky, allowing you to do just that.
"The focus is on condom
use. We're trying to get this issue on the agenda," explained Karin
Raagsjoe, who came up with the idea for the app.
The app allows users to
"test sex" with a range of fantasy characters, from a personal
trainer, to an unfaithful woman, to a handyman, all portrayed by more or less
famous Swedish actors. Once users make their choice, they're asked if they want
to use a condom, and then to record their own moaning and groaning, which is
then mixed with the sexually elated voice of their character of choice.
The whole time, messages pop
up to ask things like: "Did you know that people who suggest using a
condom are seen as confident and considerate?" and "Did you know
Swedes are among the worst in the world at using a condom?"
If none of the 11 characters
tickle your fancy, you can also choose to send a request to one of your
Facebook friends asking if they're up for a test fling.
"The two of you can
then mix your voices together," Raagsjoe told AFP, insisting the app was a
fun way to raise awareness and get people to visit the knulldeluxe.se website,
which for instance provides condom-use tips and information on where to get
tested for sexually transmittable diseases.
"Swedes are bad at
using condoms," she said, pointing out that studies showed that as few as
40 percent of Swedes used protection. According to SMI, gonorrhoea infections
in Sweden increased 13 percent last year compared to 2010, while chlamydia
infections were also on the rise, and the number of new HIV infections remains
stubbornly high with 465 cases last year.
Raagsjoe said the new app
was aimed to get young people thinking and talking about their sex habits.
"It's really hard to reach this group with the message of condom
use," she said, pointing out that young people often don't grasp the dire
consequences of risking sex without a condom.
"And people are also a
bit shy. In the north we're known for being open about sex, but it's still hard
to bring up the issue of using a condom," she said, stressing that
"it's very intimate, and it can be hard if you don't make it a habit...
sort of like wearing a bike helmet". (Relaxnews)
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