Author: MadHacktress
Posted in
Health
November 29th, 2006
Crabs, or more correctly, crab lice are one of three types of live which live on humans. Crab lice are so called because of their appearance (see images). Crabs are tan to grayish-white, wingless, six-legged and between 2 and 4 mm long. Their front two legs are very large and look like pincher claws on crabs. They use their crab-like appendages to attach themselves to hair.
While they can actually live in almost any form of human hair, including including facial hair and even in the armpits - however public lice legs are more specially designed for moving around hair in the pubic region including the perineum, where hair is more widely space. I wouldn’t spend too much time combing through your eyelashes. Read the rest of this entry »
Link:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html…
by FIONA MACRAE
Last updated at 15:31pm on 27th November 2006
British scientists have developed a revolutionary pill that men could take as a one-off contraceptive just before a date.
The tablet would prevent a man from being able to impregnate a woman, but within a few hours his fertility would return to normal.
This would make it much more acceptable to men than other ‘male pills’ under development, which alter hormone levels and have to be taken over the long term.
It is also more likely to be trusted by women as they are not relying on their man having to remember to take his pill every day for it to work.
The hormone-free ‘male pill’ was inspired by two medicines already in use and so the scientists hope it could be on the market within as little as five years.
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Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4895012.stm
By Richard Pendry
Producer and Director, “I Love Being HIV+”
Gay men fantasising about passing on HIV may encourage some to set out to become infected with the virus, a BBC programme has found.
According to previous media reports, HIV positive men, or “gift-givers”, who want to transmit the virus to so-called “bug chasers” - HIV negative or untested men - do so in an apparently negotiated exchange.
HIV positive man Ricky Dyer, who investigates the apparent bug chasing phenomenon for a BBC programme, “I love being HIV+”, says that an air of complacency about the realities of living with the virus may be one reason why infection rates have been rising.
Dyer tries to find out the truth behind the reporting by going online on a gay dating website, saying he is an HIV positive man who wants to talk to bug chasers.
“I’m not saying I am offering them sex…talk is all I want,” he says in the programme.
However, Dyer is appalled to find dozens of apparent bug chasers contact him within days saying that they want to be “pozzed up” - infected with the virus.
Meeting men online fantasising about unsafe sexual practices could also send the wrong message
Ricky Dyer
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Link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/5031378.stm
A factory worker in Zimbabwe, who asked for his name to be withheld, tells the BBC News website how the HIV pandemic has affected his sexual behaviour.
A UNAids report says the country is one of the few in Africa where the rate of HIV infection is on the decline, as people delay becoming sexually active and increase their condom use.
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Link: http://globalorgasm.org/
Purpose - To effect positive change in the energy field of the Earth through input of the largest possible surge of human energy a Synchronized Global Orgasm.
More on the site.
Link: http://www.metronews.ca/story.aspx?id=16120
In the first comprehensive global study of sexual behaviour, British researchers found that people aren’t losing their virginity at ever younger ages, married people have the most sex, and there is no firm link between promiscuity and sexually transmitted diseases.
The study was published this week as part of a series on sexual and reproductive health by the British medical journal The Lancet. Prof. Kaye Wellings of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicines and her colleagues analyzed data from 59 countries.
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Link: http://www.medgadget.com/archives/2006/11/pronto_condom.html
Company’s website: http://www.prontocondoms.co.za
It’s being touted in South Africa as an HIV spread prevention tool - a condom that can be put on in 1 second.
The first link above contains two YouTube commercials/demos of it.
Link: http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2006/nov/06111507.html
By Gudrun Schultz
MISSISSAUGA, Ontario, November 15, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A graphic sex-ed manual promoting lesbianism to teenage girls is now offered for sale by Wal-Mart Canada. Called “irresponsible and obscene” and by the Institute for Canadian Values, the material contains explicit directions for engaging in oral/anal sexual acts. The book encourages same-sex experimentation, telling girls that only 10 percent of the population is actually heterosexual, while 80 percent is “mixed” or bi-sexual.
Produced by St. Stephens’ Community House in Toronto, the book titled “The Little Black Book for Girlz: A Book on Healthy Sexuality” caused a storm of controversy earlier this fall when parents and pro-family groups first became aware of the books’ content after it was published in September.
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