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Should Schools Have Condom Vending Machines?

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<p>Over the last month, among the most talked online subjects in Thailand is that the Public Health Ministry's strategy to seek collaboration in the Education Ministry to install <a href="https://www.haloo-vending.com/sex-toy-vending-machine" target="_blank">condom vending machines</a> in schools to be able to curb adolescent pregnancy. The public is almost evenly split between supporting and rejecting the thought, but the two sides agree that sex education is a much better alternative. Whether the strategy is going to be realised, it's worth discussion and contrast to preceding steps to encourage safe sex. It demonstrated that 129,451 women aged between 15 and 19 gave birth this past year while 3,725 women under the age of 15 became moms. Of those young moms, 15,443 was pregnant and given birth before. To handle the issue, the Public Health Ministry ought to reach an arrangement with the Education Ministry to double the amount of condoms below the Condoms for Teens programme to 80 million annually with 37 million baht and also to install condom vending machines at shopping malls and colleges. Additionally, it is going to try to encourage sex education in colleges and disperse handbooks under the idea of"gender counsellor" for providing sex education to teens and parents. Last month, the agency stated that adolescent births are on the increase. The amount of births by women aged 15-18 increased 43 percent between 2000 and 2011.</p><p>After these news reports, a range of pantip.com users voiced their views on the program to install condom vending machines in schools.</p><p>The urges noted that higher accessibility of condoms would encourage safe sex and suppress unwanted effects among youths.</p><p>Row over condoms in colleges evaluations conventional perspectives on gender</p><p>Sparking alert</p><p>One site member commented that sex education and safe sex campaigns will be the most crucial, but teenagers have to have more accessibility to free or cheap condoms. He noticed that many teenagers are excessively shy or can't afford to get condoms from stores and dare not request free condoms out of nurses in their colleges' medical components. Therefore, the installation of vending machines selling condoms at reduced costs in universities are a great step to lower the amount of teens who have intercourse without birth control.</p><p>Another member agreed with this notion, stating that vending machines could make it much easier for shy pupils can to purchase condoms. He noticed that many students are afraid of being mocked by schoolmates if they're seen buying condoms since many Thais are overly conservative to purchase condoms publicly.</p><p>Meanwhile, people who collaborated with the program commented that educating teens about safe sex is a great step but selling condoms through vending machines at schools is too explicit and might fool them into believing they could have sex everywhere.</p><p>A web site user said pupils should purchase condoms at convenience stores and pharmacies instead of schools, while the other user pointed out it could be a waste of money since pupils are too shy to buy condoms from vending machines in schools.</p><p>Another user suggested free condoms must be awarded to pupils at college medical units and much more appropriate stations.</p><p>A male student commented that his college offers detailed sexual education, but he thought the ideal step to stop teenage pregnancies would be to wait to have sex following graduation.</p><p>Additionally, some people guessed that the program has a hidden agenda to encourage the selling of condoms and might allow corruption through processes to secure vending condoms and machines. A girl proposed using budgets to give sex education training for teachers. She added that students wouldn't dare to purchase condoms in schools for fear of being stigmatised by instructors.</p><p>As well as the much-discussed program, before this month Dr Phattharawalai Taluengjit at Mahidol University's Faculty of Medicine introduced a research paper suggesting to issue birth control cards very similar to Britain's U-Card and C-Card for teens to get emergency birth control pills and free condoms in engaging convenience stores and medication stores. In conclusion, though installing condom&nbsp;vending machines at schools remains a notion, the shared remarks are helpful for parties involved in preparing Thailand to brace rising teenage pregnancy and other issues brought on by sexual intercourse.</p>

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