The Female Health Company’s FC2 Female Condom has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The product helps protect women against pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.
The second-generation condom is similar in design and performance to the FC1, except that it is made of a synthetic rubber called nitrile and costs about 30 percent less. The FC1 was approved in 1993.
The company’s FC2 Female Condom made with nitrile is softer and quieter in use. Its original version failed to gain a foothold in the male condom-dominated U.S. marketplace in part because it was noisy to use as well as more expensive.
The FDA approval of the FC2 will allow the U.S. Agency for International Development to distribute the condoms via global HIV/AIDS programs, the Associated Press reported.
The first-generation FC1 has been distributed by United Nations agencies in 142 countries, the wire service said.
Dozens of health advocacy groups had urged U.S. approval of the new version, which the company said is already distributed in 77 other countries.