Results 271 to 280 of about 668,258 (314)
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Reproductive Health in Nigeria

Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology, 2009
Adolescents have special reproductive health needs, but these peculiar needs are often unmet in many cultures and countries.A cross-sectional study involving adolescents in three secondary schools in a northern Nigerian setting. Demographic characteristics as well as reproductive health issues (adolescent sex, abortion, sexual experience) among the ...
N, Ameh   +8 more
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Reproductive health in SLE

Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology, 2002
Oral contraceptives containing oestrogens and hormone replacement therapy are generally not prescribed for women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The concern regarding oestrogens is based on the greater incidence of SLE in women, abnormalities of oestrogen metabolism, murine models of lupus, several anecdotes of patients having disease flares ...
Anca D, Askanase, Jill P, Buyon
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Reproductive health in India

Advances in Contraception, 1996
While Indias National Family Welfare Programme has averted about 168 million births since its inception in 1951 Indias population has more than doubled since 1961. Simply meeting unmet demand for family planning (FP) will help India achieve its goal of replacement-level fertility however by increasing contraceptive prevalence from 41% to 60% of ...
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Nutrition in reproductive health

Journal of Nurse-Midwifery, 1998
This article reviews nutrition-related issues affecting women and their reproductive health. Health care providers must be able to perform a basic nutritional assessment to identify risk factors and develop a plan of care to reduce those risk factors and improve health.
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Women's reproductive health

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1993
PIP: Beginning in the mid-1800s, the American Medical Association, antiobscenity crusaders, and even women's groups supported criminalization of abortion. By 1900, it was illegal nationwide. In the late 1960s, women, physicians, and states began questioning abortion laws, since many women had unsafe, often fatal, illegal abortions.
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Reproductive health and public health ethics

International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 2007
AbstractIndividuals' reproductive choices are private matters, but sexual conduct and pregnancy impose significant public health burdens. Ethical principles of public health are distinguishable from principles applied in modern bioethics. Bioethical principles have been developed at the clinical or microethical level, affecting relations among ...
B M, Dickens, R J, Cook
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Women, Reproductive Health, and Health Reform

JAMA, 2011
It is becoming more evident as trends and documented racial disparities emerge that the health needs of US woman are not being met. In response the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) promises continuous coverage for the approximately 19 million US women who currently lack health insurance and for the many more who have only sporadic ...
Erin, Saleeby, Claire D, Brindis
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Curriculum Reform for Reproductive Health

African Journal of Reproductive Health, 2002
A new model of reproductive health care delivery is unfolding, driven by emerging health issues, expanding technology and increasing public expectations. Additional imperatives in service provision for women's health compel reforms to undergraduate medical education using reproductive health as the basis for restructuring curriculum contents.
Olufemi A. Olatunbosun, Lindsay Edouard
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Sexual and Reproductive Health

Seminars in Reproductive Medicine, 2022
Danielle, Mazza, Jessica R, Botfield
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Reproductive Health: A Global Overview

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1991
A global overview of reproductive health outlines major challenges for action. Worldwide, 60 million to 80 million couples suffer from infertility. At the same time, there is a striking unmet need for contraception in developing countries. Unsafe abortion practices result in between 115,000 and 204,000 deaths each year. Female genital mutilation in one
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