Indian Health Services today issued an updated policy to ensure that Native American women can obtain emergency contraception at IHS facilities. The update comes more than two years after a federal ...
A study from the Guttmacher Institute confirms what many have long suspected: The vast majority of religious women are using contraception, even if some religious leaders — particularly Catholics — ...
Many women with IBD are unaware of the risks of hormonal contraceptives and pregnancy on their disease and symptoms. Peak incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) corresponds with the prime ...
June 23, 2012 — The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has updated its 2010 recommendations regarding the use of hormonal contraception among women at high risk for HIV infection. The ...
Background: More than 30% of the pregnancies in women aged 35 and over are unintended. This paper compares perceptions about contraceptive methods and use among women with and without an unintended ...
Catholic institutions such as Georgetown University should be satisfied with the Obama administration’s compromise on the issue of providing no-cost birth control for employees, and they should work ...
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Good professional advice means women are more likely to use contraception after giving birth
More than half of people who have given birth are not using contraception two months later despite the risk that back-to-back pregnancies can pose, a new UCL study shows. Subscribe to our newsletter ...
The use of modern family planning methods among married women in Rwanda has risen gradually over the past three decades, from 13 percent in 1992 to 64 percent in 2025, according to the Rwanda ...
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