The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thousands to be sterilised in global ‘vasectomy-athon’

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GIANYAR, Indonesia: Thousands of men around the world were to be sterilised yesterday in what organisers dubbed a global ‘vasectomy-athon’, to encourage men to take a bigger role in family planning and combat resistance to the procedure.

Some 750 doctors in 25 countries were set to perform the procedure on over 3,000 volunteers to mark World Vasectomy Day, with many operations being provided free or at discounted rates.

“In helping to shoulder responsibi­lity for family planning, men become heroes to their partners, to their families and to our future,” said event co-founder Jonathan Stack.

The event is being held as a report from campaigner­s and donors warned efforts to get modern contracept­ives to women in some of the world’s poorest countries are not on track, with millions fewer reached than had been hoped.

At a ceremony in a temple on the Indonesian island of Bali, the headquarte­rs for World Vasectomy Day this year, the first six men to undergo the procedure were presented to an audience before being taken outside to mobile health clinics to be sterilised.

The men lay on an operating table in the clinics — buses fitted out with medical equipment — while doctors performed the short procedure. Vasectomie­s were also being carried out to mark the day in countries including India, the United States and Spain.

Around four in 10 pregnancie­s worldwide are unplanned and event organisers said that family planning is still too often left to women, who are the ones who must deal with the consequenc­es of unintended pregnancie­s.

In many countries, less than one per cent of men get vasectomie­s, despite the fact the procedure is safe and in the majority of cases has no effect on sex life, the organisers said.

In Muslim-majority Indonesia, efforts to persuade men to get vasectomie­s have been hampered after the country’s top Islamic clerical body several years ago declared the procedure ‘haram’, or against Islamic law.

Other attempts to encourage vasectomie­s have backfired. A district on Sumatra announced in 2012 it would hand out cash to civil servants who underwent the procedure — only for the move to spark anger from women who feared their sterilised husbands would have affairs.

Elsewhere around the world the procedure is burdened by controvers­ies, and in many countries campaigner­s have to overcome the misguided belief that it impairs a man’s virility.

Iran recently eliminated free vasectomie­s, as it seeks to improve its birth rate, and there has even been resistance from experts in sub-Saharan Africa, who have expressed concern that widespread use of vasectomy would lead to lower usage of condoms and so higher HIV rates.

Prominent vasectomy doctor Doug Stein, who has performed the procedure on over 30,000 men and founded World Vasectomy Day with Stack, told the Bali audience that the operation was positive for men, their families and societies.

“It seems to be a wonderful option for men who have had as many children as they want,” he said.

Friday’s event was the third World Vasectomy Day, with the first held in 2013 and headquarte­red in Australia.

Organisers chose to base this year’s event in Bali to coincide with an internatio­nal family planning conference that had been due to take place on the island, but which was postponed after volcanic ash closed Bali airport for days. — AFP

A Balinese man has his blood pressure checked before a vasectomy operation in Gianyar on Bali island. — AFP photo In helping to shoulder responsibi­lity for family planning, men become heroes to their partners, to their families and to our future.

Jonathan Stack, event co-founder.

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