Filipina Pea TV β€” Your Guide to the Philippines, Relationships, and Travel
← Back to Home

Why Do Filipinos Fear Birth Control? Let's Ask Them! #philippines #filipino

πŸ“… 2024-05-24⏱ 19:05
πŸ“… 2024-05-24 Β |Β  ⏱️ 19:05 Β |Β  πŸ‘οΈ 155.2K views Β |Β  πŸ‘ 8.2K likes Β |Β  πŸ’¬ 2.3K comments

Pea tackles one of the most controversial and culturally sensitive topics in the Philippines: the widespread avoidance of birth control despite a population crisis. She presents hard statistics β€” 4,570 babies born per day, only 40% of Filipinos using any contraception, population growth 15 times higher than neighboring Thailand β€” then conducts street interviews to understand why Filipinos aren't using the tools available to them. The answers reveal a tangle of Catholic guilt, misinformation from friends and Facebook, and deeply ingrained cultural taboos around discussing sex.

The numbers are staggering and Pea lays them out upfront ​

  • 4,570 babies born in the Philippines every day β€” 190 per hour
  • Only 40% of Filipinos use contraception of any kind
  • Only 13.7% of women use birth control pills (roughly one in eight)
  • Just 4% of Filipino men use condoms
  • Almost half of Filipinas say they avoid oral contraceptives because they were told it would ruin their reproductive systems
  • Current population is 118 million, projected to hit 148 million by 2050
  • Population growth rate is 15 times higher than Thailand's
  • With automation and AI coming, Pea argues adding more people only perpetuates poverty

Married woman interview: the "withdraw" method and cancer fears ​

  • A married woman with two children says she doesn't want more kids because raising them is too expensive
  • Her birth control method: her husband withdraws ("withdraw money? No, your husband withdraws")
  • She won't use condoms because "we will not feel good during our sex" β€” she says there's "no tickle tickle" with condoms
  • She's afraid of contraceptive pills because a friend told her they cause cancer and other "bad symptoms"
  • When Pea offers to tell her contraception is safe as a friend, she says she still wouldn't believe her β€” she trusts her other friend's warning more
  • As a Catholic, she believes using contraception is equivalent to aborting a baby, which is why the Church forbids it
  • She doesn't know a single person who uses contraception
  • Confirms that traditional Filipino families do not discuss sex with their children β€” it's completely taboo

Migo (male interviewee): supports birth control but still doesn't use it ​

  • Says birth control is good because it can prevent poverty β€” believes one to two children is enough to provide good education
  • Admits his family never talked about sex because of their religious Catholic upbringing
  • Confirms the Catholic Church in the Philippines teaches that contraception is "a sin against nature" β€” you're supposed to let conception happen naturally
  • Points to teen pregnancy as a direct result of not knowing about birth control, leading to the epidemic of single mothers
  • His wife is not on birth control β€” they practice abstinence-by-exhaustion: he works days, she works nights, they see each other on weekends
  • They have sex about two to three times a month (Pea: "Aren't you afraid your husband might look for some action somewhere else?")
  • He's not worried about his wife's fidelity because they're too busy working and raising two kids
  • Confirms it's true that most Filipinas don't want their partners to wear condoms β€” uses the analogy "if you're going to eat a banana with the peel, would you like it?"
  • Says he had some anatomy education in school but it was very basic β€” body parts shown as cartoons, organs were covered up
  • Would talk to his two sons about safety when they come of age, but would not explain the mechanics ("that's going to be awkward")

Young woman (Langa): gets information from Facebook ​

  • Knows about birth control methods but learned about them primarily from Facebook, not from parents or school
  • Her parents are very strict and never discussed sex or the dangers of unprotected intercourse
  • Has friends who use contraception to avoid unplanned pregnancy
  • Believes Filipino men are irresponsible and don't use protection β€” "they just want to have lots of babies running around"
  • Believes it's true that contraceptive pills ruin your reproductive system β€” heard it "from the surroundings" and from other women
  • Says women told her pills ruin "body posture" (likely meaning overall physical health)
  • Parents never gave the sex talk, which is why she's also awkward discussing it with friends
  • Gets most of her information from scrolling Facebook, which occasionally shows reproductive health content but not consistently
  • Confirms Filipinas generally don't want their boyfriends/husbands to wear condoms
  • Agrees the Philippines doesn't need more babies and people need to control themselves
  • Currently practicing abstinence β€” not in a relationship, says she's "reserving myself" and dates to marry

Young man (Migo #2): doesn't even know what birth control is ​

  • Says he's not familiar with pills, IUDs, or condoms
  • Doesn't think sex education is taught in Philippine schools
  • His family is conservative and never discussed sex
  • Agrees the Philippines doesn't need more babies
  • Represents the most extreme knowledge gap Pea encounters

Pea's analysis and conclusions ​

  • Thanks interviewees for their bravery β€” most people refused to talk about this topic at all, and some who did asked to be kept off camera
  • Notes a huge disconnect: almost everyone agreed the Philippines doesn't need more people, but nobody is actually preventing pregnancy effectively
  • People who said they only wanted two kids often ended up with five, using withdrawal or the rhythm method, and when those failed they just shrugged and accepted it
  • The government isn't the problem β€” they're actually providing decent sex education through schools and public health centers, and birth control is often available for free
  • The problem is cultural: religious prohibitions, misinformation from friends/family/Facebook, and the deeply rooted taboo against discussing sex
  • Points out the absurdity that hundreds of millions of women worldwide have used the pill for 60+ years β€” if it caused sterilization, we'd know by now
  • But in the Philippines, "rumor and gossip outweigh evidence and research"
  • Concludes that as long as people get their health information from their next-door neighbor instead of reliable sources, nothing will change

πŸ“Ί Watch the full video on YouTube

πŸ”” Subscribe to The Filipina Pea