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Once you've watched someone inhale a condom through their nostril and pull it out of their mouth, it's a hard thing to unsee. Where would one see such a thing, you might ask? On YouTube, of course, where people began uploading videos of themselves taking part in the so-called condom snorting challenge in 2013 (not to be confused with the not-nearly-as-gross condom challenge, which involved dropping water-filled condoms on other people's heads). In answer to the several queries we've received: yes, the videos are real. We've watched them so you don't have to. We hasten to add this caveat, however, that despite what you may have read in alarmist press coverage of the phenomenon in early 2018, it is not accurately described as a current craze, fad, or trend. The vast majority of condom snorting videos we found in a YouTube search were at least a year old. Most dated from 2013, with a few going all the way back to 2007. Mainstream news outlets reported on the condom snorting challenge in 2013, but the phenomenon was never that widespread and gradually petered out. March 2018 saw an uptick in media coverage, but it wasn't because people were snorting condoms again. The more likely reason was publicity surrounding a phenomenon that had gone viral a few months earlier, the so-called Tide pod challenge, which triggered safety warnings from poison control experts and led to a ban on videos of people eating laundry detergent. As with the Tide pod challenge, the press went into full-on moral panic mode in their coverage of condom snorting. Fox News was one of many news outlets warning that the disturbing new trend could be deadly: And, indeed, the unintended consequences can be fatal. Bruce Y. Lee, an associate professor of international health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, penned an article for Forbes citing examples of fairly serious injuries sustained by people who accidentally inhaled or ingested condoms during oral sex. In one case, a woman suffered a collapsed lung and contracted pneumonia after a condom went down her trachea. In another, a woman developed appendicitis after a condom fragment became lodged in her appendix. While this does not necessarily mean that you should panic if you accidentally swallow a condom (because you may just eventually poop it out), Lee wrote, it does strongly suggest that you should not deliberately inhale or swallow a condom. We concur. Let the record show that while we pooh-pooh the media's claims that condom snorting rises to the level of a trend, we urge anyone tempted to try it to think hard about the possible consequences, which could, in fact, be dire.
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