English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-09-16 19:09:23 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Immigration

13 answers

Sex!

2006-09-16 19:11:13 · answer #1 · answered by zambranoray 3 · 0 0

Prayer

2006-09-17 02:10:44 · answer #2 · answered by SM 2 · 1 0

1. Condom
2. Pills
3. Withdrawal
4. Tampon

2006-09-17 02:11:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

2 bricks, you put the male genitalia between 2 bricks and slam these together, it's 100% proof for life, but be careful that your fingers won't be smashed.

2006-09-17 02:19:56 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think their form of birth control is just when they abstain.

2006-09-17 03:15:03 · answer #5 · answered by Daisy 6 · 0 1

The Male-Nonorgasmic Method. If the man don't achieve an orgasm, there will be no baby... that's pretty much it.

2006-09-17 02:11:38 · answer #6 · answered by fiveamrunner 4 · 0 0

Female sterilization is the world's most popular method of birth prevention. A global survey of reproductive health among married couples by the United Nations found that one fifth rely on female sterilization (tubal ligation) to control their fertility. In Brazil, India, and China, a third or more of all married women have been sterilized.

Even though male sterilization (vasectomy) is safer, quicker, and less expensive, it is much less common, used by just 4 percent of married couples. In only a few countries, including New Zealand, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Bhutan, do more couples choose male over female sterilization.

Out of the world's 1 billion married couples, some 650 million plan their families. It is the other 350 million couples who either do not have access to family planning services or do not want to plan their families who contribute a disproportionately large share of the near 80 million people added to the world's population each year. It is also couples in this group who seek out more abortions and who are most at risk from higher maternal mortality.

Among the world's married couples who do practice modern contraception, the next most popular methods after female sterilization, which is used by 36 percent, are intrauterine devices (IUDs), at 27 percent, and the pill, at 14 percent. An additional 6 percent choose other modern female methods.

Just 17 percent of modern contraception is in the hands of men. In addition to the 7 percent of couples relying on male sterilization, 9 percent use condoms. But male methods are used by only 12 percent of couples in the developing world, compared with 38 percent in the industrial world. Among traditional methods, withdrawal—perhaps the oldest method of birth control—is practiced by more than 32 million married couples worldwide. It is the leading method for couples in several East European countries, including Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and Romania.

New Zealand boasts the world's highest vasectomy rate; there, nearly one in five married men has been sterilized. The method is just slightly less popular than the pill. Family planning researchers from Bangladesh, the world's eighth most populous country, are examining New Zealand's high vasectomy rates for clues on how to promote this method in their own densely populated country.

More men assume responsibility for family planning in Japan than in any other country, no doubt because the pill became available only recently. In 2000, condoms accounted for almost 78 percent of modern contraceptive use there. This is down from at least 86 percent in 1994. Condom use has fallen in recent years as some couples switched to the pill, which was finally approved by the Japanese government in 1999.

The condom is becoming somewhat less popular in Japan just when its use elsewhere is increasing as a means of protection against sexually transmitted infections, importantly HIV. Among all American contraceptive users, for instance, pill use dropped from 31 percent in 1988 to 27 percent in 1995, while condom use climbed from 15 to 20 percent. Similar shifts have been observed in Canada, France, and Australia.

In the United States, 38 percent of married modern contraceptive users depend on male methods, split between condoms and vasectomy, but female sterilization remains the single most popular method, chosen by 34 percent of couples. Twenty-two percent rely on the pill. Less than 1 percent choose IUDs—one of the world's lowest rates.

In China and India, home to the world's two largest populations, female contraceptive measures predominate. In China, 44 percent of married women using modern contraceptives rely on the IUD and 40 percent on sterilization. In India, female sterilization is the overwhelming choice, accounting for a full four fifths of contraceptive use.

2006-09-17 02:22:19 · answer #7 · answered by cantcu 7 · 0 1

Many women sleep in saris.

Really.

2006-09-17 02:39:26 · answer #8 · answered by dognhorsemom 7 · 0 0

The filthy waters of the Ganges!

Clearly they don't use birth control, theres a billion of them.

LOL someone said BO! What about hair, Indian girls are sooooo hairy, its sickening.

2006-09-17 02:10:40 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 5

Nothing!

2006-09-17 02:10:44 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

ur mama

2006-09-18 17:35:17 · answer #11 · answered by YR1947 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers