Abstract
As researchers and community-based providers continue to encourage latex condom use as a chief strategy to prevent HIV transmission
among men who have sex with men, research is needed to better explore the intersecting associations among penis size (length
and circumference), condom feel, ease of finding condoms, recent experience of condom failure (breakage and slippage), and
unprotected anal sex. Data were taken from a 2010 community-based survey of self-identified gay and bisexual men in New York
City (n = 463). More than half (51.4 %) reported penile length as 6–8 in. long (15–20 cm) and 31.5 % reported penile circumference
as 4–6 in. around (10–15 cm). Variation in self-reported penile dimensions was significantly associated with men’s attitudes
toward the typical/average condom, difficulty finding condoms that fit, and the experience of condom breakage. Men who had
engaged in recent unprotected insertive anal intercourse reported significantly higher values for both penile length and circumference,
and these men were significantly more likely to report that the average/typical condom was “too tight.” Most men had measured
their length (86.2 %) and/or circumference (68.9 %), suggesting that penile measurement might be a common and acceptable practice
among gay and bisexual men. As HIV and STI prevention providers continue to serve as leading distributers of free condoms,
these findings further highlight the need for condom availability to be in a variety of sizes. Improving condom fit and attitudes
toward condoms may also improve condom use and minimize condom slippage and breakage.
among men who have sex with men, research is needed to better explore the intersecting associations among penis size (length
and circumference), condom feel, ease of finding condoms, recent experience of condom failure (breakage and slippage), and
unprotected anal sex. Data were taken from a 2010 community-based survey of self-identified gay and bisexual men in New York
City (n = 463). More than half (51.4 %) reported penile length as 6–8 in. long (15–20 cm) and 31.5 % reported penile circumference
as 4–6 in. around (10–15 cm). Variation in self-reported penile dimensions was significantly associated with men’s attitudes
toward the typical/average condom, difficulty finding condoms that fit, and the experience of condom breakage. Men who had
engaged in recent unprotected insertive anal intercourse reported significantly higher values for both penile length and circumference,
and these men were significantly more likely to report that the average/typical condom was “too tight.” Most men had measured
their length (86.2 %) and/or circumference (68.9 %), suggesting that penile measurement might be a common and acceptable practice
among gay and bisexual men. As HIV and STI prevention providers continue to serve as leading distributers of free condoms,
these findings further highlight the need for condom availability to be in a variety of sizes. Improving condom fit and attitudes
toward condoms may also improve condom use and minimize condom slippage and breakage.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Category Original Paper
- Pages 1-10
- DOI 10.1007/s10508-012-9952-4
- Authors
- Christian Grov, Department of Health and Nutrition Sciences, Brooklyn College, City University of New York (CUNY), Brooklyn, NY, USA
- Brooke E. Wells, Center for HIV/AIDS Educational Studies and Training (CHEST), New York, NY, USA
- Jeffrey T. Parsons, Center for HIV/AIDS Educational Studies and Training (CHEST), New York, NY, USA
- Journal Archives of Sexual Behavior
- Online ISSN 1573-2800
- Print ISSN 0004-0002