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(This is the second part of a two-part series on virginity pills. The first part explores why women use these unscientific products to undo their 'lost' virginity. Read here.)
What is the price a woman is ready to pay to 'restore' her virginity? Apparently a lot – and we aren't just talking money.
Days before she was to get married in April 2022, 24-year-old Rani ordered a 'fake hymen pill' on a popular e-commerce website. According to an ancient custom in Maharashtra's Kanjarbhat community, the bride's virginity is 'tested' by looking for blood stains on a white sheet – right after the wedding night.
The website told an already panicked Rani that once inserted, the pill dissolves automatically. Only, it did not.
Two days after she used it, she developed a yeast infection in her vagina – leading to severe itching and swelling of the affected part. Rani took more than a month to recover, and she underwent treatment in secrecy, she tells The Quint.
The lengths women are forced to go to abide by the myth of virginity is proving to be a less talked-about safety hazard. An episode like Rani's begs these questions: Why are virginity pills so popular? Are they really safe? And should you be using them?
The so-called 'artificial' hymen could be a pill, a capsule, or an insertable pouch. Priced anywhere between Rs 2,500 and Rs 4,500 per capsule, they all claim to be the 'cure for lost virginity.'
Dr Ruchi Bhandari, Director of Mishka IVF Centre in Jaipur, who has experience treating women who have used this product, explains:
A component most of these products have in common is synthetic blood – made most likely from Perfluorocarbons (PFCs). PFCs are man-made compounds containing just fluorine and carbon. It is sometimes used to induce oxygen during surgery which may cause significant blood loss.
Dr Gupta further adds, "These companies do not specify the ingredients because these products are completely unlicensed and illegal. However, it has become a big market because they exploit the fear of women. Even these manufacturers won't know what they are putting in these products, because they are completely unscientific, and do not work. For example, if the said product has heavy metal as a component, it can have a long-lasting impact and lead to a chronic condition in the reproductive health of women."
Cauvery, 25, from Lucknow, ordered one of these hymen pills after being pressured by her ex-boyfriend to prove her virginity. But again, the product did not dissolve and got stuck in her vagina.
"I had severe pain in my lowers for 2-3 days. I kept thinking it will pass. But, ultimately, I had to go to a doctor, who pulled it out for me. She also advised me to never use such products again," she tells The Quint.
But it can have even worse side-effects.
This means that using such products could lead to:
Irritation of vagina
Itching in the region
Fungal or bacterial infections
Urinary tract infection – if there's lack of knowledge on where to insert the pill
Swelling of the area
Bleeding
Another prevalent myth is that once the vagina is stretched during sex, it remains stretched forever. Gynaecologists say that these tightening creams are more popular, and reactions from them, are more regular.
For example, some of the components in these vaginal tightening creams are aloe vera extract, lactic acid, vitamin E, olive oil, almond oil, jojoba oil, and alum powder. They don't do anything to tighten the vagina, Dr Bhandari says, adding that they might end up harming the pH levels of the vagina.
In 2019, there was widespread outrage against these products being then sold on Amazon, prompting the e-commerce giant to pull them off their website.
In November 2019, All Food and Drug Licence Holders' Foundation (AFDLH), a pan-India body, filed a complaint with the FDA and the Drugs Controller General of India (DCGI) against the online sale of products, including pills and powders, used for the 'confirmation' of virginity.
Abhay Pandey, president of AFDLH, had then told The Asian Age: "During an online search, I came across such taboo products and immediately filed a complaint with the FDA and the DCGI."
But three years since then, there has been no ban on these products, with many of them being freely available on multiple e-commerce platforms in India.
"There definitely needs to be a crackdown on these products, the government and activists must join hands to expose people who are trying to make money out of them," Dr Gupta adds.
(The Quint has sent queries to the DCGI on the sale of virginity pills. The article will be updated as and when they respond.)
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