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Global Health: Science and Practice
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Global Health: Science and Practice

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Family Planning and Reproductive Health

  • Open Access
    Evaluating the Implementation of an Intervention to Improve Postpartum Contraception in Tanzania: A Qualitative Study of Provider and Client Perspectives
    Kristy Hackett, Sarah Huber-Krum, Joel M. Francis, Leigh Senderowicz, Erin Pearson, Hellen Siril, Nzovu Ulenga and Iqbal Shah
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2020, 8(2):270-289; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00365

    Training and supervision to improve interpersonal aspects of care, including an emphasis on patient-centered counseling, informed choice, and respectful and nondiscriminatory service delivery, should be integrated into future postpartum family planning initiatives.

  • Open Access
    Recall Efforts Successfully Increase Follow-Up for Cervical Cancer Screening Among Women With Human Papillomavirus in Honduras
    Kerry A. Thomson, Manuel Sandoval, Carolyn Bain, Francesca Holme, Pooja Bansil, Jacqueline Figueroa and Silvia de Sanjosé
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2020, 8(2):290-299; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00404

    A reminder phone call had a substantial impact on high rates of women returning for rescreening among those at high risk of developing cervical precancer. Scaling up routine cervical screening coverage must be accompanied by efforts to retain women throughout the screening cascade and continuum of care.

  • Open Access
    Close to Home: Evidence on the Impact of Community-Based Girl Groups
    Miriam Temin and Craig J. Heck
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2020, 8(2):300-324; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-20-00015

    Available evidence, though limited, shows that programs can use community-based girl groups to help adolescent girls improve attitudes toward gender roles and norms, early pregnancy, and child marriage; evaluations indicate they have suboptimal performance on health behavior and health status.

  • Open Access
    Insights Into Provider Bias in Family Planning from a Novel Shared Decision Making Based Counseling Initiative in Rural, Indigenous Guatemala
    Meghna Nandi, Jillian Moore, Marcela Colom, Andrea del Rosario Garcia Quezada, Anita Chary and Kirsten Austad
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2020, 8(1):10-17; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00377

    Race, ethnicity, and indigenous status should be considered as potential drivers of provider bias in family planning services globally. Efforts to confront provider bias in family planning counseling should include concrete strategies that promote provider recognition of biases and longitudinal curriculums that allow for sustained feedback and self-reflection.

  • Open Access
    Implementation and Scale-Up of the Standard Days Method of Family Planning: A Landscape Analysis
    Julianne Weis and Mario Festin
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2020, 8(1):114-124; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00287

    Pilot introductions of the Standard Days Method (SDM) of family planning demonstrated its potential to meet unmet contraceptive needs in key populations, strengthen male involvement, and increase overall contraceptive uptake. Few countries had implemented national scale-up due to barriers, such as competing resource priorities and uneven stakeholder engagement. Demand-side user barriers, including insufficient fertility awareness knowledge, were also constraints. Policy makers should determine the SDM's added value to the contraceptive method mix and identify potential barriers to its implementation.

  • Open Access
    Unmet Need for Family Planning and Experience of Unintended Pregnancy Among Female Sex Workers in Urban Cameroon: Results From a National Cross-Sectional Study
    Anna L. Bowring, Sheree Schwartz, Carrie Lyons, Amrita Rao, Oluwasolape Olawore, Iliassou Mfochive Njindam, Jimmy Nzau, Ghislaine Fouda, Guy H. Fako, Gnilane Turpin, Daniel Levitt, Sandra Georges, Ubald Tamoufe, Serge C. Billong, Oudou Njoya, Anne-Cécile Zoung-Kanyi and Stefan Baral
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2020, 8(1):82-99; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00330

    Female sex workers (FSWs) in Cameroon have unmet need for effective contraception, and experience of unintended pregnancy and pregnancy termination is common. Reducing barriers to accessing high-quality, voluntary family planning services in FSW-focused community services is a key strategy to promote client-centered care, promote informed choice, reduce unintended pregnancies, and improve quality of life for FSWs.

  • Open Access
    Using a Chord Diagram to Visualize Dynamics in Contraceptive Use: Bringing Data Into Practice
    Amy Finnegan, Saumya S. Sao and Megan J. Huchko
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2019, 7(4):598-605; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00205

    A chord diagram is an innovative tool that can be used to visualize switching and quitting in contraceptive use between 2 discrete time points. It complements existing analysis of contraceptive failure rates and provides a richer understanding of contraceptive discontinuation and method switching that can lead to fresh insights to improve family planning programs.

  • Open Access
    Using Digital Technology for Sexual and Reproductive Health: Are Programs Adequately Considering Risk?
    Loraine J. Bacchus, Kate Reiss, Kathryn Church, Manuela Colombini, Erin Pearson, Ruchira Naved, Chris Smith, Kathryn Andersen and Caroline Free
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2019, 7(4):507-514; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00239

    Digital technologies provide opportunities for advancing sexual and reproductive health and services but also present potential risks. We propose 4 steps to reducing potential harms: (1) consider potential harms during intervention design, (2) mitigate or minimize potential harms during the design phase, (3) measure adverse outcomes during implementation, and (4) plan how to support those reporting adverse outcomes.

  • Open Access
    Provider-Initiated Family Planning Within HIV Services in Malawi: Did Policy Make It Into Practice?
    Erin K. McGinn and Laili Irani
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2019, 7(4):540-550; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00192

    Four years after Malawi embraced a policy of provider-initiated family planning (PIFP) within its HIV Clinical Guidelines, this policy remained largely unimplemented at the health facility level. Strengthening PIFP in Malawi’s public and private health facilities will require targeted and comprehensive systems changes.

  • Open Access
    Standardizing Measurement of Contraceptive Use Among Unmarried Women
    Madeleine Short Fabic and Apoorva Jadhav
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2019, 7(4):564-574; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-19-00298

    Because contraceptive prevalence and unmet need for family planning estimates for unmarried women vary widely depending on the chosen sexual recency inclusion factor, all data platforms should adopt a 1-month window in these calculations to have comparable and actionable estimates.

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  • Cross-Cutting Topics
    • Adolescents and Youth (40)
    • Behavior Change Communication (42)
    • Digital Health (55)
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    • Primary Health Care (21)
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    • COVID-19 (46)
    • Family Planning and Reproductive Health (259)
    • HIV/AIDS (78)
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    • Postabortion Care (18)
    • Supply Chain (15)
    • Tuberculosis (26)
    • Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (5)
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