Condom Sense Comes to Italy...Finalmente!
I have over my desk a poster that I consider to be one of the best pieces of social marketing I have ever seen.
The poster, from the Lega Italiana per la Lotta contro l’AIDS (The Italian Anti-AIDS League), features a photograph of two items, set against a blood-red background. On the left appears a cornicello, the ancient horn-shaped amulet worn to protect against the malocchio (evil eye); on the right, an unrolled condom. Under the cornicello is the word “irrazionale”; under the condom, “razionale.”
The Lila poster notes that the “profilatico,” when used correctly, “is an effective means of preventing HIV and sexually transmitted diseases.” Unlike the cornicello, it actually does protect its wearer from grave misfortune. Men who use condoms are making a rational choice to protect their health and those of their partners.
But until very recently, irrationality trumped reasonableness when it came to condom advertising on Italian TV. Since the AIDS epidemic began in
That will all change in January 2008, with the airing of a series of taboo-breaking HIV awareness ads that mention condoms by name. The ads, by film director Francesca Archibugi and paid for by the Ministry of Health, are designed to help Italians, and especially young people, overcome their embarrassment in asking for condoms in pharmacies and other outlets.
One ad, shot in a pharmacy at
Francesca Archibugi, known for films such as “Shooting the Moon,” emphasizes the urgency of pro-condom advertising in
“The true dangers are never talked about – there’s a moralistic facade which, when uncovered, reveals great ignorance,” she told the Reuters news agency.
The Lega Italiana per la Lotta contro l’AIDS supports Archibugi’s point. Based on calls to the organization’s telephone information lines, Lila says that knowledge about HIV transmission in
The long overdue condom ads are part of a larger government anti-AIDS campaign that Lila has urged health minister Livia Turco to support. In a June 2006 letter to Turco, Lila’s national president Filippo Manassero noted that she had the opportunity to reverse the neglect that characterized the Berlusconi administration’s handling of the epidemic. Manassero criticized the previous government for its “progressive disinvestment” in HIV/AIDS and a general “lowering of the guard in respect to the issues of prevention.”
He noted that the government had registered more alarm over avian flu and SAARS, even though “there has not been a single case [of those diseases] recorded in our country” while 40,000 Italians have died from AIDS.
In his letter Manassero called for a “serious HIV prevention campaign aimed at the general population, with clear and explicit messages specific to gender, with clear messages about condom use.” In addition to messages for the general population, he called for a focus on specific groups at higher risk for catching or spreading HIV, including adolescents and young adults, gay men, drug users, sex workers, foreigners, and HIV-positive people.
The first ads produced by the Health Ministry for the new anti-HIV campaign feature heterosexuals, which makes sense given the epidemiology of AIDS in
The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that in 2006, about 42 percent of new AIDS cases in
If
It’s amazing that it took so long for condom advertising to come to Italian television. Sexual innuendo and explicit sexual content is common on both government-owned and private TV channels, and in advertising. And not only TV advertising. A few years ago while on vacation in
Italians are hardly a prudish people. So why the squeamishness about frank condom advertisements? When Francesca Archibugi describes her new ads as a “triumph over taboo,” she’s speaking about the Catholic Church’s longstanding assertion that condom use fosters “immoral” and “hedonistic” lifestyles. Although Catholicism is no longer the official state religion of
The
The Church continues to insist that the only surefire protection from AIDS is monogamous, heterosexual marriage. Needless to say, this is of no use to all those human beings, Italian and otherwise, Catholic and not, who don’t live their lives in accordance with this intransigent, unrealistic, and yes, inhumane dogma. Pope Benedict XVI even has urged Catholic pharmacists to refuse to sell condoms and other contraceptives, arguing that “conscientious objection” by chemists “must be recognized as a right by the pharmaceutical profession.”
The new TV condom ads are sure to put
The Italian Young Socialists (Federazione Giovani Socialisti) on World AIDS Day, December 1, 2007, kicked off a campaign to do away with the value-added tax on condoms and to promote free condom distribution. Marco Alberio of the FGS said, “In our country the price of condoms is high and that means that young people don't buy them and that can be bad news for their health.” It’s fine to encourage people to buy condoms in pharmacies, or even from the condom vending machines found in Italian cities. But when it comes to the public health and HIV, the best price of a condom is free.
Condom advertising and other forms of sexual health promotion, coupled with wide availability of condoms, are critical to HIV prevention. For
i-Italy
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