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1 ed to evaluate the prospect of fertility and sexual health.
2 uate the impact of antiviral therapy on male sexual health.
3 e abuse, violence, and poor reproductive and sexual health.
4 ategies are needed to improve young people's sexual health.
5 ce 2003 (286%), followed by reproductive and sexual health (194%), and maternal and newborn health (1
6 6.8 billion), 34% supported reproductive and sexual health ($4.7 billion), and 18% maternal and newbo
7 d disbursements relating to reproductive and sexual health activities resulting in the Countdown data
8  risk of any measure of physical, mental, or sexual health among trafficked people.
9  a member of the health care team, regarding sexual health and dysfunction resulting from cancer or i
10 evalence of CSA, and its potential impact on sexual health and functioning.
11 aphics, abuse history, sexual risk behavior, sexual health and physical exams were obtained.
12    Health providers should routinely discuss sexual health and risks for blood-borne viruses (includi
13 ered for future interventions to address the sexual health and well-being of breast cancer survivors.
14  and frequency--emphasises that attention to sexual health and wellbeing is needed throughout the lif
15                    Despite its importance to sexual health and wellbeing, sexual function is given li
16 ific illnesses, including asthma, adolescent sexual health, and mental health.
17 birth care; support family planning; address sexual health; and prevent, treat, and care for sexually
18  and targeting ethnic groups at risk of poor sexual health are needed.
19 d their implications for attempts to protect sexual health at the beginning of the 21st century.
20                 The third National Survey of Sexual Health Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3) is the
21                              Improvements in sexual health can be added to the list of health benefit
22 or discontinue use of specific (but not all) sexual health care services if their parents were inform
23 were significantly less likely to stop using sexual health care services with mandatory parental noti
24 9%) indicated that they would stop using all sexual health care services, delay testing or treatment
25 n = 556) indicated they would stop using all sexual health care services, delay testing or treatment
26 ed contraceptives would impede girls' use of sexual health care services, potentially increasing teen
27 fected men and women attending the Melbourne Sexual Health Centre between July 2012 and June 2013 wer
28  3-arm randomized double-blind RCT Melbourne Sexual Health Centre, Australia, in 2009-2010.
29                            Demographic data, sexual health clinic data, and National Immunisation Reg
30 sitive N. gonorrhoeae infections at a single sexual health clinic in Toronto, Canada, that routinely
31 ns, contact details, and websites of 7 local sexual health clinics (control group).
32 antial increases were noted in attendance at sexual health clinics (from 6.7% to 21.4% in women and f
33 rospective case-control study of patients at sexual health clinics aged 15-30 years who were born bet
34  an open-label, single-arm study at 2 public sexual health clinics and 2 hospital emergency departmen
35 is an open-label randomised trial done at 13 sexual health clinics in England.
36 vical cancer screening visit, vaccination at sexual health clinics, and combinations of these strateg
37       Increases in testing and attendance at sexual health clinics, especially in people at highest r
38 rkers (reported STI diagnoses, attendance at sexual health clinics, use of emergency contraception, a
39  declines were observed in all components of sexual health compared with pretreatment.
40 ual behaviour change is central to improving sexual health, efforts are also needed to address the br
41                                              Sexual health entails the absence of disease and the abi
42 viour and assessing interventions to improve sexual health has increased in recent decades.
43 of contracting blood-borne viral infections, sexual health has largely been neglected by researchers
44 ia, engaging a biosocial approach to promote sexual health in this region.
45 ians to achieve a more proactive approach to sexual health in women receiving antipsychotic medicatio
46 nterventions targeting physical, mental, and sexual health (including a human papilloma virus program
47 ion messages for the general population, and sexual health interventions and HIV prevention intervent
48  provide empirical evidence to inform future sexual health interventions and services.
49 tional Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) and the Sexual Health Inventory for Men (SHIM) score were collec
50 creasing knowledge and changing attitudes on sexual health issues and for promoting responsible sexua
51  whether they explained ethnic variations in sexual health markers (reported STI diagnoses, attendanc
52       INTERPRETATION: Ethnic inequalities in sexual health markers exist, and they were not fully exp
53  odds ratios for all explanatory factors and sexual health markers for all these ethnic groups with w
54 atory factors explained ethnic variations in sexual health markers.
55 ealth outcomes, consisting of substance use, sexual health, mental health, weight and physical exerci
56 for prevention of adverse outcomes regarding sexual health of adolescent women.
57 ity, poverty, and education in improving the sexual health of adolescents.
58 ical and empirical pathways to improving the sexual health of those who sell and purchase commercial
59 y of high-risk sexual behaviours and adverse sexual health outcomes in five ethnic groups in Great Br
60 l function was also associated with negative sexual health outcomes such as experience of non-volitio
61  sexual function is associated with negative sexual health outcomes, supporting calls for a greater e
62 for a greater emphasis on sexual function in sexual health policy and interventions.
63 sexual function is given little attention in sexual health policy.
64 prevalence and risk of physical, mental, and sexual health problems, including HIV, among trafficked
65 arch, to help inform policymakers developing sexual health programmes, and guide future research.
66 ased, technology, monitoring, and integrated sexual health promotion approaches.
67 interventions is that no general approach to sexual-health promotion will work everywhere and no sing
68 s, and ethnic variations in other markers of sexual health, remain poorly understood.
69 s from symptomatic patients and asymptomatic sexual health screening underwent nucleic acid amplifica
70 om samples collected from patients attending sexual health services in Brighton, UK, between Jan 1, 2
71                      Among the predictors of sexual health, several are mutable (vaginal dryness, emo
72  (Natsal-3) after implementation of national sexual health strategies, and describe the epidemiology
73                              Campaigns about sexual health targeted at international travellers shoul
74 nted a Working Group on Sexual Disorders and Sexual Health to recommend changes necessary in the clas
75                Improving vulnerable couples' sexual health will require addressing the contexts in wh

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