■ By providing millions of women
with access to contraceptive services they want and need, publicly funded family planning in 2010 helped women to avoid 2.2 million unintended pregnancies.
Not exact matches
As a Catholic, I stand
with President Obama's decision
to require religious institutions
to provide
access to contraceptives.
Allowing free
access to contraceptives doesn't endanger our population, it allows families
to have a number of children that they know they can support, families
with more can support more, and there is nothing stopping them.
Because the birth control cases all focus on a 1993 federal law, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, not the Constitution, the Justices will face questions about whether the mandate
to provide free
access to 20 forms of birth control drugs or devices, sterilization, screenings, and counseling imposes a «substantial burden» on religious freedom of nonprofit employers
with religious objections
to some or all
contraceptives, whether the mandate in fact serves a «compelling interest» of the government, and whether an attempt
to provide an exemption from the mandate satisfies the requirement that such an accommodation is «the least restrictive means» of achieving the government's policy interest.
We have had universal
access to contraceptives since i can remember!!!! I only pitched in
with my girlfiend, not the Neighbors or the Bum on the corner — Get it
«MSI is also calling for healthcare professionals
to provide women
with comprehensive
contraceptive information and
access to the full range of modern methods via dedicated client consultations, and for more investment in training for healthcare professionals in fitting long acting reversible
contraceptive methods (LARCs), which are a critical part of the Government's strategy
to reduce the number of unintended pregnancies and abortions in the UK.»
«More especially, scaling up, and integrating HIV
with sexual and reproductive health services, such as the various education and information platforms, condom programming and
access to contraceptive services.»
Until such studies are conducted, they conclude that «women
with high HIV risk need
access to additional safe and effective
contraceptive options, and they need
to be counseled about the relative risks and benefits of the available family planning methods.»
The Affordable Care Act requires private insurance plans — except those grandfathered or exempted due
to employers» religious beliefs —
to provide women
with access to all FDA - approved
contraceptive methods without cost - sharing.
Employing a total market approach
with public, commercial, and non-for-profit providers
to give women, men, and young people full
access to affordable and acceptable
contraceptive options.
«
To protect individual and public health, it is important to ensure women in areas with high rates of HIV infection have access to affordable contraceptive options,» said the review's first author, Prof. Janet P. Hapgood, Ph.D., of the University of Cape Town in Cape Town, South Afric
To protect individual and public health, it is important
to ensure women in areas with high rates of HIV infection have access to affordable contraceptive options,» said the review's first author, Prof. Janet P. Hapgood, Ph.D., of the University of Cape Town in Cape Town, South Afric
to ensure women in areas
with high rates of HIV infection have
access to affordable contraceptive options,» said the review's first author, Prof. Janet P. Hapgood, Ph.D., of the University of Cape Town in Cape Town, South Afric
to affordable
contraceptive options,» said the review's first author, Prof. Janet P. Hapgood, Ph.D., of the University of Cape Town in Cape Town, South Africa.
The concept has been used
to trump other liberties,
to excuse organizations from compliance
with health care mandates that ensure
access to the
contraceptives that many struggle
to afford.
Compared
with FQHC sites that offer
contraceptive care, Planned Parenthood health centers do more
to facilitate women's timely
access to high - quality
contraceptive care.4, 5
Given that premarital sex has been nearly universal in the U.S. for more than 40 years and that early marriage poses divorce risks, it is vital
to provide teens and young adults
with access to effective
contraceptives and family planning services.
It is vital that public policies support personal childbearing decisions
with medically accurate reproductive health information, including sex education,
access to contraceptives and safe, legal abortion.
No - fault divorce laws were adopted beginning
with California in 1969 and then spread
to all 50 states.5 During the 1960s and 1970s, legal
access to birth control including oral
contraceptives became increasingly available, and in 1973 the U.S. Supreme Court made abortion legal in the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.6 These cultural changes created new opportunities for women and led
to an increased presence in the labor market, doubling from 30.3 million in the 1970s
to 72.7 million in the mid - 2000s.7