/ 8 January 2014

Surprisingly, condom lube does not soothe arthritis

Equal Education and the Treatment Action Campaign say giving condoms to schools won't increase sexual activity but rather confront the gravity of sex.
Equal Education and the Treatment Action Campaign say giving condoms to schools won't increase sexual activity but rather confront the gravity of sex.

The health department moved swiftly on Tuesday to correct a newspaper report in which a spokesperson was misquoted as saying that condom lubricant can help arthritis sufferers.

"There is no scientific evidence to suggest that the lubrication of a condom can cure arthritis, and we are appealing to members of the public not to use condoms for any other reason than that for which they are intended," Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi's spokesperson Joe Maila told Sapa.

This was particularly the case given the severe problem with HIV and Aids in the country.

Easing pain
The Times on Tuesday reported that Mpumalanga's health MEC berated arthritis sufferers for rubbing condoms on their aching joints, believing the lubricant would ease the pain.

"She called on them to stop because condoms are meant for something other than rubbing on knees," MEC Candith Mashego-Dlamini's spokesperson Ronnie Masilela was quoted as saying.

A Cape Town grandmother, who declined to be named, told the Times: "It is not a cure for my arthritis but it eases the pain."

A Johannesburg hiker said he put condoms over his emergency kit. "My wife was really upset when she found the condoms but you can carry water in them," he told the paper. – Sapa