Sentences with phrase «women about their contraceptive»

Specifically, we need to educate women about their contraceptive choices (many don't know about IUDs, and those who do are often misinformed about their safety and effectiveness), make them available at no cost to the recipient, and train the medical community on the best clinical practices.

Not exact matches

I'm so tired of people whining and complaining about contraceptives and their purposes... whether it be for family plannign issues OR to treat a «medical condition» for women that just an't suck it up and toughen up.
John Jenkins of Notre Dame and John Garvey of Catholic University, for a missed opportunity to speak the whole truth to power about the proposed new HHS mandate that would force all health insurers to cover abortifacient drugs under the rubric of «contraceptives» in «preventive» health coverage for women.
What about the Christian woman who work for Hobby Lobby who want contraceptive coverage?
In the coming years, as today's young men and women take up their responsibilities and seek to make sense of the world, it will not be adequate if Catholics who are worried - as we all ought to be - about the sexual mayhem that has been created in recent years simply denounce the evils of extreme feminism or even of the ghastly contraceptive, anti-life culture with which it has been associated.
The women were given in - person questionnaires about pregnancies, breastfeeding, hormonal contraceptive use and other factors.
Breastfeeding also has a contraceptive effect (though post natal women should be cautious about using this as a sole means of contraception if they are not yet ready to conceive another baby as it is not foolproof and in most cases only works for those feeding at least every three hours, including night feeds).
More than three quarters of women (77 %) aged 16 - 24 want a contraceptive method that they didn't have to think about every day or plan for during sex, but just 1 % are aware of all four of the most reliable methods of contraception (injection, IUD, IUS and implant) that once fitted, women don't need to worry about for up to 10 years.
77 % of women aged 16 - 24 either agreed or strongly agreed that they wanted a contraceptive method that they didn't have to think about every day or plan for during sex
«The research is very clear that most women want a contraceptive method that they can simply forget about - but many simply are unaware of the alternatives to the pill.
«Well I actually got really excited when I heard Speaker Boehner talking about «Plan B» because I thought finally they've made progress on a really important women's health issue that I've been working on,» she said at a press conference with Senate Democrats, referring to the emergency contraceptive, «Plan B.»
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.»
Any new contraceptive options for men could shift the conversation men and women have about birth control.
Researchers surveyed those women again after they had reviewed the fact sheet and found significant improvement in knowing about contraceptives.
Nationwide, about 11.2 million women ages 15 to 44, or 18 percent of all U.S. women, currently use oral contraceptive pills.
Worldwide about 144 million women use hormonal contraception — around 41 million use the injectable forms and 103 million take the oral contraceptive pill.
«Women need accurate information about their coverage and about their contraceptive options so that they can obtain whatever contraceptive method best meets their needs.
Educating women, adolescents, and their partners, providers, and policymakers about the potential utility of LARCs as high - quality, effective, and voluntary post-partum and post-abortion contraceptive options.
Women enrolled in Intervention 2 received the same care as the first intervention, as well as education about contraceptives through an online media campaign.
Lead author Angelica Lindén Hirschberg, MD, professor of women's and children's health at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, says that doctors know surprisingly little about oral contraceptives» effects on women's health — despite the fact that an estimated 100 million women around the world use them.
About 14 % of women take oral contraceptives in part to get rid of their acne, according to the Guttmacher survey.
About 10.7 million women choose female sterilization for birth control, making it the most popular contraceptive method.
In the study, about 1.3 million women, with an average age of 55, who visited UK breast cancer screening clinics between 1996 to 2001 answered a variety of questions, including the type and frequency of alcohol consumption, smoking, body mass index, exercise, and use of oral contraceptives and hormone replacement therapy.
Although oral contraceptives are highly effective at preventing pregnancy, about 9 percent of women get pregnant the first year of using them.
However, just think for a second about what the contraceptive pill meant for the women: They could start living a self - determined life.
That a group of women did achieve a family size close to replacement (an average of about 2.1 children is required to insure the same population in the next generation) several decades ago when contraceptive techniques were less sophisticated than even today's unsatisfactory variety is compelling testimony to the fact that lower fertility is attainable even without a revolution in contraceptive technology.
With the recent introduction of another effective contraceptive method — the low - cost intrauterine device to the ever - expanding contraceptive menu, it's time to think about what in the hell women...
About half of the sample used oral contraceptives, with or without condoms, and the other half of the sample relied on condoms as their contraceptive method; however, only 27 % of women reported condom use at every intercourse.
Even before young women seek services, they need to receive accurate information about the risks of pregnancy and the benefits of contraceptive use.
CPPEF works to expand education and awareness about contraception and supports increasing the accessibility and affordability of all FDA - approved contraceptive options for women, men, and teens.
About the only bright spot for reproductive rights supporters was the defeat in Mississippi of a ballot initiative that would have sharply restricted women's access not only to abortion but also to various contraceptive methods by defining a person under state law as «a human being from the moment of fertilization.»
As Congress continues to debate these issues, the Guttmacher Institute received a request from Sen. Patty Murray (D - WA), in her capacity as ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, for information about FQHCs» ability to serve the millions of women who currently obtain contraceptive care from Planned Parenthood and other types of Title X — supported sites.
About one in three (3,700) safety - net family planning centers receive Title X funds, collectively serving nearly four million women annually across the country.1 Among women who obtain contraceptive care at some type of safety - net health center, six in 10 receive that care from a Title X — supported site.
Second, the ACA eliminated out - of - pocket costs, such as copayments and deductibles, for the full range of women's contraceptive methods, including costly LARCs.8 Removing these cost barriers allows individuals to make choices about contraception without financial coercion — providing the freedom to select a method based on interest and suitability rather than cost or insurer preference.
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