Sex with someone new has always made me nervous. Now, TV is making it even worse.
I keep seeing
scary ads
I didn't get vaccinated. So lately I've been wondering: Now that I'm 29, is it too late for me to get the vaccine?
I found out about HPV eight years ago when a college girlfriend got immunized. Back then, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention only recommended the vaccine for girls and young women between the ages 11 and 26.
The earlier the better
At the time, I remember thinking that limiting it to females was strange — after all, men still spread HPV, right? But with my partner vaccinated, I let it go. I didn't know HPV could cause health problems for men.
But HPV absolutely affects men. It causes genital warts and is
pulling past tobacco and alcohol
"There are now more oropharynx cancers in men in the United States each year than there are cervical cancers in women," says
Dr. Erich Sturgis
And there's no way to screen for oropharyngeal cancer, so Sturgis says most people catch it late.
"Typically it's a man, while he's shaving," says Sturgis. "He notices a lump in his neck. That means it's already a cancer that has spread."
HPV also puts men at a risk for cancers of the anus and penis. Those are rare, but still make me anxious.
So, for men like me who missed the vaccine, is it still worth it?
The answer is complicated. In 2011, the CDC began recommending the vaccine for males ages 11 through 21 years old (26 for some high-risk groups).
Despite my age, researchers I talked to said that the vaccine could still help — if I haven't already been exposed.
But therein lies a complication. An estimated
80 percent
To have 80 percent of sexually active young adults exposed sounds bleak. But there's a caveat: "There are several dozen types of HPV that infect the genital region," says psychologist
Greg Zimet
So let's say — hypothetically — you're kind of shy and haven't had that many partners. Is it possible you've been spared?
"The chances you've been exposed to all nine types are actually vanishingly small," says
John Schiller
Schiller says the vaccine might not be a bad idea for someone outside the CDC's recommended age range. Still, it's not cheap.
"You're past the age where your health insurance is going to pay for it," says Schiller, so getting the vaccine isn't imperative — it's a personal decision.
"Peace of mind for you may be worth more than it is for some other people," he tells me.
So, I got the vaccine. It's costing $130 out-of-pocket per dose, and the CDC recommends three shots. But it could help me, even if it just calms my anxious inner voice. And it might keep me from spreading the virus to someone else.
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