Kenyan vasectomies broadcast live on Facebook
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-38027215 Version 0 of 1. Vasectomy operations on men in Kenya have been live streamed from a theatre in the capital as part a campaign to promote the sterilisation procedure. At least 150 men booked in for the 20-minute procedure which involves severing the tubes that carry sperm. Doctors performed the vasectomies on stage behind a curtain at the Kenyan National Theatre in Nairobi. Kenyan men considering a vasectomy often fear the stigma of being seen as having lost their masculinity. The World Vasectomy Day organisation was behind the event, which was broadcast on Facebook and included a panel of experts discussing "the myths and misconceptions about vasectomy". Campaigners reiterated that it was a safe form of family planning and why it was important in terms of "the country and the planet". "Many men have this perception that vasectomy causes a man to turn into a woman," Dr Jack Zhang, a Canadian doctor at the event, told the BBC. "Some men fear that in Africa there's a high mortality rate so they need to have more children." The BBC's Abdinoor Aden in Nairobi says some of the men who came to have a vasectomy were driven by economic concerns about having a large family. Others said it was to help their partners. "The family planning methods my wife was using have had bad effects on her so I opted to go and do vasectomy so that she can be relieved," one man told the BBC. What is a vasectomy? Source: World Vasectomy Day |