The present invention relates to condoms and, more particularly, to condoms which provide enhanced tactile stimulus transmission to the wearer and increased protection from unwanted pregnancy and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.
Condoms have been around for centuries, and are well established as being effective as contraceptives when used properly. Short of abstinence, a condom, if used correctly, provides the most effective defense against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), which distinguishes it from other methods of birth control. Preventing transmission of STDs is becoming increasingly important given their prevalence, morbidity, and mortality. These STDs include chlamydia, gonorrhea, nongonococcal urethritis, trichomoniasis, herpesviruses, human papillomaviruses (which cause genital warts, and some types cause cervical cancer in women), syphilis, Hemophilis ducreyi infection, hepatitis B and C, and human immmunodeficiency virus (HIV, the etiological agent in acquired immunodeficiency disease, or AIDS), as well as STDs which have yet to be discovered. Chemical compounds which have bactericidal, virucidal, and spermicidal properties, such as nonoxynol-9, have been packaged in the form of a lubricant with condoms in hopes of augmenting the protection against both pregnancy and STD transmission, but nonoxynol-9 has recently been determined to not offer protection against STDs, so other chemicals are being sought to offer additional protection.
Given the facts that correctly used condoms are effective at preventing pregnancy and are the most effective means short of abstinence for preventing transmission of STDs, more widespread and consistent use of them by those who are promiscuous or do not desire pregnancy could potentially have a substantial positive impact on public health. The reason condom use is not more widespread is that the wall of a condom, which is a barrier-between sexual partners possessing the protective qualities listed above also becomes a barrier which reduces the tactile sensitivity between the two partners, thereby reducing the pleasure of coitus, especially for the male condom wearer. Coitus is a powerful, spontaneous, and impulsive act in humans, and because rational thought tends to be diminished during this time, irrational decisions—and acts—often follow. Since use of a conventional condom diminishes sensation, and thereby pleasure, of the wearer, its use is too often avoided. An unused condom is an ineffective condom, so it follows that a condom with properties allowing for enhanced tactile stimulus transmission to the male wearer would be more likely to be used, and used consistently. This increased usage would likely result in less disease spread and unwanted pregnancy, and could benefit society on a large scale from a public health perspective. Preventing even one transmission of HIV would make this invention worthwhile.
Other solutions in existence include:
1. Conventional condom.
2. Diaphragm, cervical cap.
3. Oral contraception.
4. Surgical sterilization.
5. Intrauterine device.
Shortcomings of other solutions include:
1. Decreased tactile sensation of the wearer often leads to decreased usage.
2. Suboptimal birth control method with inadequate protection against transmission of STDs.
3. No protection against STDs and must be taken daily (only available for females, at this time) without missing a dose to maintain effectiveness as a method of birth control.
4. No protection against STDs and imparts the inherent risks of surgery to the recipient; more risky for a female than a male.
5. No protection against STDs but has an increased risk of pelvic infections and possibly of future infertility.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an improved barrier method of birth control with improved protection against the spread of STDs which also provides for enhanced tactile stimulus transmission to the male wearer over conventional condoms.
It is another object of the invention to provide a device comprising two barrier layers which contain a lubricant which may carry a chemical or chemicals that serve to neutralize STDs and sperm.
It is another object of the invention to provide projections incorporated within the inward facing side of the outer condom to accentuate tactile stimulus transmission to the male condom wearer.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided an improved two layered condom device which employs the use of projections on the inward facing wall of an outer condom to offer enhanced tactile stimulus transmission, or sensation, to a male wearer when compared to current conventional condoms. Because this device has two barriers, which contain a lubricant between an inner condom and an outer condom which may carry chemical substances which serve to neutralize bacteria, viruses, and sperm, it follows that it would be superior to a conventional condom in preventing sexually transmitted disease (STD) transmission and unwanted pregnancy. These qualities of affording an improved sensory experience to the male wearer as well as improved protection against unwanted pregnancy and the spread of STDs create a higher likelihood that this device will be used consistently, with all of the public health benefits inherent to consistent use of such a barrier device.
A complete understanding of the present invention may be obtained by reference to the accompanying drawings, when considered in conjunction with the subsequent, detailed description, in which:
For purposes of clarity and brevity, like elements and components will bear the same designations and numbering throughout the FIGURES.
Lubricant 18 in a sufficient quantity is placed during packaging of the outer condom 14 such that it will be in the inner lumen, or inward facing side, when a device 22 is installed, of said outer condom 14, and when said outer condom 14 is unrolled over said inner condom 10, a potential space 16 will be created which will contain said lubricant 18. Said lubricant 18 may also contain a chemical or chemicals which function to neutralize sperm and the causative agents of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). Nonoxynol-9 is a chemical which gained Food and Drug Administration approval for use many years ago as a spermicide, and also has significant neutralizing activity against the etiological agents of many STDs in a laboratory setting, and was therefore widely thought to help to control the spread of STDs when used topically or in conjunction with condoms or diaphragms. But based on an extensive review of the literature, scientific opinion has reversed recently such that nonoxynol-9 is felt to offer no additional protection against STD transmission when used with conventional barrier methods of birth control. Because frequent exposure of this chemical to the vaginal mucosa has been associated with erosion and breakdown of this tissue, and said erosion may actually facilitate STD transmission, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has since discouraged use of nonoxynol-9 with barrier methods, although it is still in common use for its spermicidal properties.
Use of a device 22 is relatively straightforward. For application of the original embodiment of said device 22
When a wearer of a device 22 engages in coitus, lubricant 18 contained in said potential space 16 provides for a lower coefficient of friction between the outward facing wall 24 of said inner condom 10 and the inward facing wall 24 of said outer condom 14 when compared with the coefficients of friction at both the interface of the penis of the wearer and the inward facing wall 24 of said inner condom 10, and at the interface of the outward facing wall 24 of said outer condom 14 and the sexual partner being engaged (
It is counterintuitive that a dual barrier condom would have improved tactile stimulus transmission to a wearer when compared to a conventional single barrier condom, but designing each projection 20 to be as aggressively shaped as is necessary or desired, potentially much more aggressive or peaked than a conventional textured condom would have a need to be, is partly how this is achieved. That, combined with said lubricant 18, facilitates tactile stimulus transmission to the wearer by causing the appropriate surfaces to be more slick, as described herein above. Because this inventive device 22 comprises two distinct barriers, should there be a break in the wall 24 of either an inner condom 10 or of an outer condom 14, the remaining intact layer, combined with the presence of said lubricant 18 contained between said inner condom 10 and said outer condom 14, which may carry a chemical or chemicals which neutralize sperm and the causative agents of STDs, will continue to provide protection against unwanted pregnancy and STD transmission. Since breakage of a wall 24 of either said inner condom 10 or said outer condom 14 would be infrequent, and because very little, if any, said lubricant 18 would come in contact with either the wearer of a device 22 or his partner while using either the original or the alternative embodiment of said device 22, the potential exists for using chemicals or concentrations of chemicals which might not be considered for use with a conventional condom, and these chemicals could potentially possess extraordinary protection properties. All of these factors—the dual barrier with an inner condom 10 and an outer condom 14, said lubricant 18 between said inner condom 10 and said outer condom 14, and the enhanced stimulus transmission to the wearer of a device 22—make said device 22 more likely to be worn consistently and to be more effective protection against unwanted pregnancy and the spread of STDs when compared to a conventional condom.
Since other modifications and changes varied to fit particular operating requirements and environments will be apparent to those skilled in the art, the invention is not considered limited to the example chosen for purposes of disclosure, and covers all changes and modifications which do not constitute departures from the true spirit and scope of this invention.
Having thus described the invention, what is desired to be protected by Letters Patent is presented in the subsequently appended claims.