Kristan Hawkins is not what you might call a unifying figure. The founder and leader of Students for Life of America, a grassroots anti-abortion network, Hawkins travels to college campuses for ...
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 — ...
Despite the potential for adverse maternal and fetal outcomes, contraceptive use in women with certain medical conditions is suboptimal, according to a new study. Steven W. Champaloux, PhD, MPH, a ...
A new study confirms the obvious: women use contraception to better achieve their life goals, not because they’re lazy, godless sluts. Few studies had ever actually asked women why they use ...
One in 5 women sought an abortion in the last decade, and, of the 20% of women who tried to access an abortion, a third of them faced challenges like cost and lack of insurance, according to a recent ...
The fight for reproductive justice is continuing at the federal and state levels, and the Republican Party is determined to prove its dedication to controlling women's bodies and birth control choices ...
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 ...
Birth control in the US right now is full of contradictions.
Women living with HIV need more frequent and patient-centered counseling on contraception to make informed decisions about their personal reproductive health and protect their access to reproductive ...
Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s attacks on the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) have had an immediate and devastating impact on the ground in low-income countries. On 20 January ...
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Why are more married women using modern contraception?
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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