A Welsh scientist working on a new male pill wants to reduce the burden on women of protecting against unwanted pregnancies.

Prof Chris Barratt is leading research on a non-hormonal drug which prevents sperm cells from reaching an egg.

His team at the University of Dundee has received significant funding from the Bill and Melina Gates Foundation.

“It’s been a very poorly researched topic for 40 or 50 years,” Prof Barratt said, but society has changed.

His team’s research could see men given a gel or a pill that would affect the sperm cell, effectively disabling its function.

Instead of targeting the production of sperm, his research focuses on slowing the sperm cells’ swimming action down and making them similar to those in infertile patients.

  • Salad_Fries@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    From my understanding, its more along the lines of “risk averse regulators see the side effects as unacceptable”… not “crybaby men are crybabies” like your post infers. (Seriously, your post has some really toxic vibes)

    Birth control has a lot of very horrible side effects… in addition to the common hormonal changes, they also come with things such as an increased risk of stroke.

    For women, child birth is extremely intense on the body with lots of increased risk. Lets look at the stroke side effect as an example… birth control causes increased risk of stroke, but pregnancy causes an even higher risk of stroke. Its easy for regulators to justify the stroke risk of birth control because it actively prevents the higher stroke risk of pregnancy.

    For men, child birth comes with no risk whatsoever because they cant physically get pregnant. lets look at that same stroke side effect for example… birth control provides increased risk of stroke, but comes with no medical benefit. that increased risk is extremely difficult to medically justify.

    Essentially, childbirth/pregnancy is extremely high risk for women, which makes it easier to justify the side effects for a medication that prevents it. The risks of childbirth/pregnancy dont exist for men though, so its much harder to justify the same side effects.

    Yes, it feels unfair and fucked up, but thats because reproduction is inherently unfair and fucked up…

    there may be something to be said about whether or not the regulators factor in the externalities of the pregnant partner when looking at approving such medication… i have absolutely no clue though.

    • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Oh please, do mansplain to me about the risks of pregnancy some more, I hadn’t had a fucking clue! 🙄🙄🙄

      You assholes just can’t fucking help yourselves, can you??? 😂

      It’s not as if there are other ways to stop pregnancy if the risk is such a concern, if only men didn’t regularly refuse them too, perhaps women wouldn’t have to suffer the hormonal hell men have_ the privilege_ to refuse, that is imposed on us often from puberty on top of that risk. But clearly it isn’t really that much of a concern after all… Not for men.

      Also, because I’m not wasting any more energy on you:

      You can pretend toxic masculinity and male fragility and entitlement, never mind the male dominance and minimisation of women’s suffering in medicine, don’t exist all you like, but that doesn’t make them any less real or impactful… ¯(ツ)/¯

      • Salad_Fries@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Oh please, your toxic incel-like worldview effectively proved my point. pregnancy is inherently unfair and fucked up… the unfair nature of it makes the burden of risk inherently unfair & fucked up.

        No amount of male birth control is going to make you content, so i ask, what the fuck are you advocating for?

        • stepan@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yeah. I think you explained it well. The bodies themselves are different, so it makes sense why the interventions are different.

          We could use male condoms, but the problem is couples don’t like that because they want as much of the sexual process to continue naturally.

          If you want the process to go uninterfered as much as possible, it makes sense to put the cork at the end of the race (right before fertilization).

          If you’re ok with interfering at the beginning, by all means use a male condom (put the cork at the start of the race).