11.12.2008

Most Single Adults Not Using Condoms


TUESDAY, Nov. 11 (HealthDay News) -- Six out of every 10 middle-aged Britons do not use a condom during a first-time sexual encounter, a new study shows.

Those numbers might be similar for Americans, one expert said. "Data in the U.S. are likely comparable and, given prevailing policies with regard to contraception, may be worse," said Dr. David L. Katz, director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Conn.

In fact, U.S. rates of all STDs, including HIV, have been increasing with an estimated 19 million new cases each year and more than 1 million people living with HIV. Almost half of the new cases of STDs are among people 15 to 24, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But older adults are at risk, too. "Often it's assumed that sexually transmitted infections are just increasing among young people, but U.K. surveillance data shows that sexually transmitted infection diagnosis rates are on the increase among all age groups in the U.K.," said Catherine Mercer, the study's lead researcher and a lecturer at the Centre for Sexual Health & HIV Research at University College London.

Most Britons engaging in unprotected sex are in their 30s and 40s and in relationships where there is an age difference of five or more years, according to the report, which was published in the Nov. 12 online edition of the International Journal of Epidemiology.

"Low rates of condom use among those starting partnerships in their 30s and 40s means that they too are at great risk of sexual infections," Mercer said.

For the study, Mercer's group collected data on more than 11,000 men and women who participated in the second British National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles. The survey included questions on recent partnerships, condom use and how soon after meeting they had sex.

Among all the people surveyed, almost 9,600 reported having heterosexual sexual partners in the past 12 months. More men (39.1 percent) than women (20 percent) said that these relationships were "not regular," the researchers reported.

More women (55.2 percent) than men (38.9 percent) said their partnerships were marriages, or involved living together with the partner. Men reported having sex sooner after a first date than women. One in five men said they had sex within 24 hours after meeting their partner compared with one in 10 women.

Over all age groups, condoms were used by 55.3 percent of the partners during their first sexual encounter. However, the rate of condom use declined with advancing age. For example, among 16- to 19-year-olds, 68 percent of males and 67.4 percent of females used a condom during a first sexual encounter, while among 35- to 44-year-olds only 38.1 percent of men and 28.8 percent of women used a condom.

In addition, in relationships where there was an age difference of five years or more, 60.8 percent were unlikely to use a condom during a first sexual encounter, compared with 44.1 percent of partners who were closer in age.

According to Mercer, rates of STDs are increasing in the U.K. In fact, the Health Protection Agency found a 6 percent increase in the number of new STDs in 2007 compared with 2006.

Additional research found that in one area of England, the rate of STDs more than doubled between 1996 and 2003.

"Everyone starting a new sexual relationship, regardless of age, should use condoms and continue to do so, until they and their partner have both been tested for sexually transmitted infections," Mercer said.

People ignore condoms at their peril, Katz added.

"Consistent use of condoms is the most reliable way of preventing HIV transmission next to abstinence, and is effective in preventing other transmissible diseases and unintended pregnancy as well," Katz said.

The lack of condom use by mature adults in the British study is noteworthy and disturbing, Katz said. "These are likely people who know about condoms and can get them. There is clearly a need to better educate men and women about the hazards of unprotected sex, and the advantages of condom use. Easy access to condoms should be a priority as well," he said.

More information

For more on STDs, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

11.10.2008

CVS wants people to get pregnant

CHICAGO, Nov 10 (Reuters) - CVS Caremark Corp (CVS.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said on Monday it is offering discounts on fertility treatments to couples struggling with infertility and high medication costs.

The program is aimed at patients who do not have fertility medication health insurance coverage

CVS offers lower-cost fertility medications

Mon Nov 10, 2008 10:54am EST

CVS could not immediately provide details on the pricing of its plan.

CVS said about 7.3 million U.S. women and their partners, or about 12 percent of the reproductive-age population, are affected by infertility, citing data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

CVS is promoting the fertility treatment savings plan just as it rolls out a low-cost plan for common generic drugs. Under a plan launched on Sunday, shoppers can get 90-day prescriptions for more than 400 generic medications for $9.99 each at CVS drugstores when they pay an annual fee of $10.

About 45.7 million Americans were uninsured in 2007, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. (Reporting by Jessica Wohl; Editing by Brian Moss)

11.04.2008

CVS to start offering mini-spas

Ok, so, this just seems inane. In one area of our city, the customers are going to be offered even more high end beauty products and a mini-spa treatment...whereas 5 miles away, in another part of our city, the customers have to ask for their condoms to be unlocked for them...along with lots of other merchandise. This just doesn't add up.

CVS to open mini-spa service stores

CVS to launch Beauty 360 to offer mini-manicures in stores adjacent to pharmacies


NEW YORK (Associated Press) - CVS Caremark Corp. said Monday it would open new beauty products stores next to its pharmacies that offer quick-service spa services.

CVS said its new Beauty 360 stores will employ licensed professionals trained to do mini-manicures, express facials, hand massages and make-up.

The first Beauty 360 to open is at CVS's Dupont Circle store in Washington, D.C. A second one will open next month in Mission Viejo, Calif. Those locations will sell brands such as Canyon Ranch, Clarins Fragrance, Elizabeth Arden Fragrance, Ahava, Borba and others.

The company is looking at other potential markets for 2009 launch.

10.30.2008

CVS on NAYLOR ROAD, SE Ward 8 is LOCKED UP


2646 Naylor Road, SE
Ward 8

What do you know??? The condoms are locked up- the Manager tried to tell me and another team member at first that he lost the money in Condoms, I then followed up with the question:
"Sir, you mean to tell me that our of all the products in the entire store you LOSE the most money in CONDOMS???"
I kept talking as I tend to do. .
"There are more products in the store that are more expensive to 'steal'"
The manager then retracted his comments and said that "No no, I don't lose the most money in condoms. . . "

In the 51 stores in the District of Columbia the Naylor Road location is the ONLY CVS that has some of their condoms locked up.
The ONLY CVS that had their Jumbo packs locked up. . . the CVS close to Howard University had their Condoms in Click Boxes but NOT their Jumbo Packs. . . does this make sense?
(1900 7th Street, NW- close to Howard University)
LOSS PREVENTION????
I think not. . .
We also discovered the following at the Naylor Road location:

Empty cases- in which the managers comment was "that's what THEY do. . .THEY steal it"
which my team member and I thought was interesting because walk a few steps away and this is what you will find free and open in the aisle:
So if the "they" could steal why wouldn't "they" steal the ones that were in the open??? why go to the trouble of busting open the click boxes??

Also some of the click boxes were broken and not functioning correctly!

The actions of CVS is amoral. . . more information to come about the HIV/AIDS rates in Ward 8. . .

Charting Birth Control Access in DC


Well, it's official. Access to reproductive choice is on the radar of not just our little group anymore. The Washington City Paper today reported that they will be charting the pharmacies in the District to identify which ones are filling prescriptions for birth control and the abortion pill, no questions asked and which ones are dispensing a side of moral opinion instead. The City Paper will be updating it's findings on it's website, and we'll post updates about it as well.

If you know of a place that has refused to fill a prescription related to reproductive rights, or have had issues with a pharmacist passing judgment on your prescription needs, let us know!

10.29.2008

Drugs stolen at CVS pharmacy...not condoms

Yet another story about drugs being stolen from a CVS...tell me...where are the stories about condoms being stolen from CVS? I'm still waiting.

CVS in scandal...but are we really surprised?

Former Blue Cross executive dropped in Operation Dollar Bill probe

01:00 AM EDT on Wednesday, October 29, 2008
By Mike Stanton

Journal Staff Writer

PROVIDENCE –– Thomas A. Lynch, the former Warwick state senator and Blue Cross executive who was a prominent figure in the origins of Operation Dollar Bill, is no longer under investigation in the long-running State House corruption probe.

A spokesman for U.S. Attorney Robert Clark Corrente confirmed yesterday that Lynch was sent a letter last week informing him that he is no longer a target of a grand-jury investigation, similar to a letter that went out on Oct. 15 to former Senate President William V. Irons.

As the $250,000-a-year vice president and chief lobbyist for Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island, Lynch drew on relationships developed in his earlier two decades in the Senate to advocate for the state’s largest health insurer. He golfed and schmoozed with lawmakers, paid Irons’ greens fees and rented his family’s Nantucket summer home to the family of then-Speaker John B. Harwood.

Several months before Blue Cross and Lynch parted ways in November 2004, the new Senate president, Joseph A. Montalbano, went to bat for his former colleague, calling him “a friend” who had done a “wonderful job” representing Blue Cross’s interests in the Senate.

But Lynch had also helped put another former senator, John A. Celona, on TV, in a public-access cable show financed by Blue Cross over the objections of Lynch’s subordinates at Blue Cross. At the time, Celona chaired the Senate committee that regulated health care.

After The Providence Journal revealed the arrangement, the authorities launched what quickly grew into a wide-ranging influence-peddling probe. Celona wound up in prison, after admitting to selling his office to Blue Cross, CVS and Roger Williams Medical Center. Last December, Blue Cross avoided criminal charges against the company by taking responsibility for the actions of unnamed former executives in corrupting politicians, and agreeing to contribute $20 million for affordable health care in Rhode Island.

But Lynch, who left Blue Cross in November 2004, will not be charged.

Lynch did not respond to requests for comment. The letter from the U.S. Attorney’s office, dated Oct. 20, was sent to the Boston office of Lynch’s late lawyer, Richard M. Egbert, who died earlier this year.

In an interview last week, Corrente, speaking generally, said some of the cases spawned by Operation Dollar Bill are bumping up against statute-of-limitations deadlines and that prosecutors have to make decisions in the coming months about whether they have enough evidence to move forward.

When Celona was sentenced to 2½ years in prison early last year, a federal prosecutor told the judge that the ex-lawmaker’s cooperation had resulted in active investigations of seven politicians and seven companies. But since then, authorities have seen Celona’s credibility eroded following withering cross-examinations in corruption trials involving Roger Williams and CVS.

Convictions of Celona, ex-House Majority Leader Gerard M. Martineau and former Roger Williams president Robert Urciuoli have been balanced by the acquittals of two CVS executives and, now, the dropped investigations of Irons and Lynch. Other investigations, including one probing the legislative ties of Beacon Mutual Insurance Co., remain active.

Sen. William Walaska, D-Warwick, a business partner of Lynch’s, said the shadow of the investigation has taken its toll. Although Lynch, a lawyer, maintains a law office in Providence, Walaska said Lynch has been selling credit-card services to small businesses. Lynch is also a minority owner in Walaska’s auto-parts business.

“I wonder if they sent him an apology, and a check for the money he spent [on legal fees],” said Walaska. “I’m sure it’s been a struggle. You wake up every morning thinking: Is today going to be the day? It costs you your livelihood. The question is, how can you get it back again?"

10.28.2008

CDC: New HIV Infections Higher than Previously Estimated 8/4/2008

CVS Exposed: Benning Road, NE vs. Woodley Park, NW

















Benning Road, NE (predominantly black neighborhood). . . . The Pain Relievers make sense as far as loss prevention, they are top on the list of items that are stolen the most, but the condoms. . . not so much.

Woodley Park, NW (predominantly white neighborhood)

10.23.2008

San Diego under lock down

Seems that the condom locking was also happening in San Diego...

10.22.2008

Pharmacies--too much autonomy?

I know this isn't about condoms being locked up, but it's definitely related to pharmacies, and I'm shocked that as a rule this pharmacy doesn't sell birth control of any kind.

To see the article, click here.

10.21.2008

CVS--your money comes from your pharmacy, not your condoms

One reason commonly cited as the reason that CVS feels the need to lock up its condoms is that they are commonly stolen. Well, we've already refuted that argument, but here's another portion of that piece that...

"About 70 percent of the revenue at CVS/pharmacy is generated from its pharmacy — it fills one in seven prescriptions in the United States and one in five within its own markets."

Interesting...still no mention of condoms...

Here's the whole article.

Infant formula, but not condoms

As it turns out, there ARE some really expensive things that are being stolen from CVS....infant formula being one of them. Containers of Similac are being stolen in some CVS stores and at prices of $13.99-$75 a can, this makes perfect sense. They're high price items, easy to steal for personal use or resell on the street. However, condoms don't even come CLOSE to the same price bracket as these. And as we know from my previous post, are not stolen as often as Similac cans.

Looks like the argument that condoms are being locked up because of theft is wearing thin...

Top 50 Shoplifted Items...


Organized Retail Theft
Most Frequently Shoplifted Items in Rank Order


Advil tablet 50 ct
Advil tablet 100 ct
Aleve caplet 100 ct
EPT Pregnancy Test single
Gillette Sensor 10 ct
Kodak 200 24 exp
Similac w/iron powder - case
Similac w/iron powder - single can
Preparation H 12 ct
Primatene tablet 24 ct
Sudafed caplet 24 ct
Tylenol caplet 100 ct
Advil caplet 100 ct
Aleve caplet 50 ct
Correctol tablet 60 ct
Excedrin tablet 100 ct
Gillette Sensor/Excel 10 ct
Gillette Sensor 15 ct
Monistat 3
Preparation H Ointment 1 oz
Similac w/iron concentrate 13 oz
Tavist-D decongestant tablet 16 ct
Trojan ENZ 12 ct
Tylenol gelcap 50 ct
Tylenol gelcap 100 ct
Tylenol tablet 100 ct
Vagistat 1
Advil caplet 50 ct
Advil gelcap 50 ct
Advil gelcap 24 ct
Advil tablet 50 ct
Aleve tablet 50 ct
Anacin tablet 100 ct
Centrum tablet 60 ct
DayQuil liquicaps 20 ct
Dimetap tablet 12 ct
Duracell AA 4 pk
Ecotrin tablet 100 ct
Ecotrin tablet 60 ct
Energizer AA 4 pk
Excedrin tablet 50 ct
Femstat 3 app
Gillette Atra 10 ct
Gyne-Lotrimin 3 app
Monistat 7
Motrin caplet 50 ct
Motrin tablet 24 ct
Oil of Olay 4 oz
Preparation H Ointment 2 oz
Schick Tracer FX 10 ct
Gillette Sensor/Women 10 ct
Sudafed tablet 24 ct
Visine drops 1 oz

The only condoms on the list...Trojan ENZ 12 ct, comes in at a measly 23....but correct me if I'm wrong...the top 22 items on this list are for the most part NOT locked up in CVS stores...now that doesn't make sense to me at all.

10.19.2008

CVS Exposed: 6 Dupont Circle/ 1637 "P" Street, NW vs. 320 40th Street, NE


Dupont Circle:













It makes sense that a $189 dollar fertility test would be behind a counter if loss prevention was in mind- it is nearly $200!!! That makes "cents"

Then head on over to Northeast. . . .
Business as usual. . . click boxes and lock & key for "THOSE" people as one employee at a CVS stated.














More loss prevention. . . which again makes sense- Oil of Olay® and preventing AIDS two very separate issues.

Save Lives Free the Condoms PSA