SNIP AND TUCK: Men getting vasectomies in droves after Roe v Wade is overturned
'They have been thinking about a vasectomy for a while, and the Roe v Wade decision was just that final factor,' an urologist said
The overturning of Roe v Wade has reportedly resulted in several men getting vasectomies. According to Doug Stein, a Florida urologist famous as the "Vasectomy King", the demand for the procedure has spiked after the June 24 Supreme court ruling. He apparently said that earlier four or five men used to come for vasectomy in a day but after the verdict, requests have increased to 12 to 18 a day.
Stein reportedly said, “It was very, very noticeable Friday, and then the number that came in over the weekend was huge and the number that is still coming in far exceeds what we have experienced in the past. Many of the guys are saying that they have been thinking about a vasectomy for a while, and the Roe v Wade decision was just that final factor that tipped them over the edge and made them submit the online registration.”Another man thinking along the same line as Figueroa is Eric Nisi, whose girlfriend Amanda Omelian is already taking double precautions for birth control. And now because of the recent judgment, the couple fears that Florida may ban contraceptives along with prohibiting abortion. So Nisi has decided to go for a vasectomy. The 29-year-old said he does not want his girlfriend to “stress over getting pregnant,” before adding: “The world is a scary place and you don't know what's coming, because it seems like we're moving backward.”
A Los Angeles based urologist, Philip Werthman, has also claimed that there’s “300 to 400%” spike in the number of vasectomy consultations he’s done after the Roe v Wade decision. He noted that men’s physiology has changed lately as they are now playing a crucial role in family planning too.
Another Iowa-based urologist Esgar GuarĂn said that he’s seen "200 to 250%" increase in his website’s traffic as people search for information on vasectomy. Marc Goldstein, a urologist and director of the Center for Male Reproductive Medicine and Microsurgery at Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York, added that “it's been a dramatic shift. And this [decision] is only going to further impact that in terms of increasing requests."
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