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1 uctive health by donor type and purpose (eg, family planning).
2 olescent birth rate) and 5.6 (unmet need for family planning).
3 itions, maternal health services access, and family planning.
4 ing medical management, prognostication, and family planning.
5 improvement of maternal health and access to family planning.
6 nced age structure through birth control and family planning.
7 es could be a valuable, additional method of family planning.
8 ral, theological, and medical teaching about family planning.
9 age, size and location of lesion, and future family planning.
10 wledge, demand for, and ultimately uptake of family planning.
11 crucial for improving patient counseling and family planning.
12 antly make women aware of contraceptives for family planning.
13 ghly variable kinetics that might complicate family planning.
14 cial for genetic counseling and reproductive family planning.
15  to guide subsequent clinical management and family planning.
16 dary education, and to reduce unmet need for family planning.
17 lation, which had become an issue because of family planning.
18  undergraduate university students regarding family planning.
19 ption, which can increase access to improved family planning.
20 uence their plans for education, travel, and family planning.
21  leaders to increase knowledge and uptake of family planning.
22 ographic investments including education and family planning.
23 tries aiming to respond to unmet demands for family planning.
24 orn survival and maternal health (MDG 5) and family planning.
25 as implications for clinical care and future family planning.
26 al, labour, birth, and post-partum care, and family planning.
27 mmit on Family Planning in 2012 inspired the Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) initiative and the 120x20
28                                          The Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) initiative, launched at th
29 thods (mDFPS) in 48 countries as part of the Family Planning 2030 initiative between 1990 and 2020 fo
30  59% of the observed change in mean Hb, with family planning (25%), malaria prevention programs (17%)
31  89% of the observed change in mean Hb, with family planning (27%), increased access to bednets (26%)
32 e observed change in mean Hb among NPW, with family planning (35%), household sociodemographics (29%)
33 e, socioeconomic status difference 56%), and family planning (46% coverage, socioeconomic status diff
34  (51%), older age >= 60 (12%), and pregnancy/family planning (6%).
35  of 37% adherence in sick-child care, 46% in family planning, 60% in labor and delivery, and 61% in A
36 alth activities amounted to 15.9% and ODA to family planning 7.2%.
37 ternal-fetal medicine (7 [13%]), and complex family planning (8 [15%]).
38 ost commonly cited positive association with family planning (802 [79.9%]), while long work hours and
39                                          For family planning, a genetic diagnosis provides reproducti
40 ducing socioeconomic-related inequalities in family planning across the 48 studied countries, which a
41 e health to provide childbirth care; support family planning; address sexual health; and prevent, tre
42 ission of paternal mutations is important in family planning after chemotherapy and donor selection f
43 ative, launched at the 2012 London Summit on Family Planning, aims to enable 120 million additional w
44                                              Family planning alone could prevent 57% of all deaths be
45 e of contraception, and high unmet needs for family planning, although exceptions existed.
46                                   Society of Family Planning, American Foundation for Suicide Prevent
47  contraceptive prevalence and unmet need for family planning among MWRA, UWRA, and all WRA, taking in
48               INTERPRETATION: The demand for family planning among the states and union territories i
49 ption and are less exposed to information on family planning and AIDS via in-person channels.
50 more pronounced in surgical specialties, and family planning and building goals may influence special
51 uss how these insights may be used to inform family planning and cancer risk assessment based on a wo
52              A comprehensive strategy adding family planning and community-based interventions would
53 vocacy tool for highlighting the benefits of family planning and fertility decline.
54 ions around socially sensitive services (eg, family planning and human immunodeficiency virus) differ
55 n and guidance on how to increase the use of family planning and inform future efforts, especially in
56                          Midwifery with both family planning and interventions for maternal and newbo
57 eting the results of genetic testing and for family planning and pregnancy.
58 gned to offer comprehensive and confidential family planning and preventive health services to indivi
59                      The best way to improve family planning and promote women's health is to offer b
60 nd annual data on development assistance for family planning and reproductive health in a difference-
61 s need to be set against the cost of various family planning and reproductive health interventions.
62 tion and Development set broad new goals for family planning and reproductive health.
63 significant association with unmet needs for family planning and spacing among married women in India
64                                              Family planning and subsequent DMT decisions should aim
65  the predictors for the total unmet need for family planning and the unmet need for spacing.
66 ument the prevalence of total unmet need for family planning and unmet need for spacing among married
67 ctive primary health care (eg, immunisation, family planning), and 14 have progressed to comprehensiv
68 ed a lecture regarding contraception use for family planning, and a posttest assessment was conducted
69 control (Uganda and Senegal), investments in family planning, and better access to health services th
70 oms, attending sexually transmitted disease, family planning, and obstetrics and gynecology clinics.
71 n institutions, targeted policies to support family planning, and opportunities for modified role des
72 ening in sexually transmitted disease (STD), family planning, and primary care clinical settings.
73 s testing and treatment, primary healthcare, family planning, and sexual and reproductive health serv
74 rvices would still meet much of the need for family planning, and that some progress could be made to
75 uality, Integrated Delivery, HIV, Nutrition, Family Planning, and Water Sanitation and Hygiene Progra
76 ors; worse access to medical care, including family planning; and worse underlying maternal health.
77 ity infrastructure and direct observation of family planning, antenatal care (ANC), sick-child care,
78 CH interventions in four domains, comprising family planning, antenatal care, immunisations, and mana
79 ility, population growth, and unmet need for family planning are high.
80                      Physician fertility and family planning are rarely discussed during training.
81 Attitudes among female oncologists regarding family planning are unknown.
82             Contraceptive drugs intended for family planning are used by the majority of married or i
83                            Contraception and family planning are vital aspects of sexual and reproduc
84           A cultural shift toward supporting family planning as a normal part of young adult life, ra
85                        As part of the Oxford Family Planning Association study, we compared mortality
86  of schooling with the total unmet needs for family planning at (q25) quantiles and the unmet need fo
87 mily, there needs to be more education about family planning, awareness about cryopreservation, and f
88                                              Family planning benefits maternal-child health, educatio
89  contraception ushered in an era of improved family planning, but more than 60 years after approval o
90 followed by coverage of satisfied demand for family planning by women of reproductive age (19% vs 63%
91 d reproductive healthcare services-including family planning-by 2030 in the SDG era with its emphasis
92 us tracts (8.7%) lost access to confidential family planning care, corresponding to an estimated 933
93 nd seeking care at maternal and child health/family-planning centres in Matlab, Bangladesh, for the p
94           Faith-linked controversies include family planning, child protection (especially child marr
95                                              Family planning choices for men are currently limited to
96 mparison analyses can best assess individual family planning choices, but our results suggested a vul
97  (2) impact of role models and mentorship on family planning choices; (3) family building is discoura
98 ers (FSWs), men who have sex with men (MSM), family planning clinic attenders and partners of pregnan
99 ntibodies, only 6% of patients from a nearby family planning clinic gave a positive reaction in both
100 rual cycles who presented to a participating family planning clinic requesting emergency contraceptio
101  women with polycystic ovaries attending the family planning clinic, and 20 staff volunteers as healt
102 h gestational diabetes attending a high-risk family planning clinic.
103 egative for HPV at recruitment from a single family-planning clinic, and who had further follow-up.
104 n abortion access, triggering the closure of family planning clinics and leading to confusion about t
105 en attending sexually transmitted disease or family planning clinics at 7 sites.
106 ervical specimens from 4,980 women attending family planning clinics in the northwestern United State
107 evalence in women aged 18-24 years attending family planning clinics in the prevaccine period (2005-2
108   Females aged 13 to 21 years who attended 2 family planning clinics in the San Francisco bay area; 4
109 ed data from chlamydia screening programs in family planning clinics in two geographic areas of the U
110 Screening women for Chlamydia trachomatis in family planning clinics is associated with a reduced inc
111 data on females aged 15-19 years who visited family planning clinics more than once from 1988 to 1992
112  T. vaginalis prevalence ranged from 5.4% in family planning clinics to 22.3% in jails.
113 n attending sexually transmitted disease and family planning clinics, 4.3% (n = 174) were positive by
114  inner-city sexually transmitted disease and family planning clinics, as well as five high school-bas
115 g clinics, as well as five high school-based family planning clinics, was performed, and the resultin
116 kers than in women attending gynecologic and family planning clinics.
117 ercion and unsafe relationships for women in family-planning clinics.
118                          National Health and Family Planning Commission of China.
119                          National Health and Family Planning Commission of the People's Republic of C
120  and Technology Support, National Health and Family Planning Commission of The People's Republic of C
121                          National Health and Family Planning Commission of the People's Republic of C
122  of China, and Shanghai Municipal Health and Family Planning Commission.
123               The difficulties of evaluating family planning communication programs may be surmountab
124 0.003)); and family planning (new and repeat family planning consultations decreased by 47.4% in Azra
125 ation, and contraceptive method uptake after family planning counseling and method provision was low.
126 e contraception and access to devices during family planning counselling visits.
127                       This study ascertained family planning decisions by women with bipolar disorder
128  that a career in cardiology may have on the family planning decisions of female cardiologists, the W
129 y-related psychological distress, and inform family planning decisions.
130                               Obstetrics and family planning demonstrated the most diverse clinical t
131 tion at 12, 14, 16, and 20 weeks postpartum, family planning discontinuation and/or change, pregnancy
132                               Integration of family planning discussions and support for family build
133  planning goals, support currently in place, family planning education in medicine and factors contri
134                                     Improved family-planning education, access, and support are urgen
135  Tanzania should focus on the unmet need for family planning, especially in the Western and Lake regi
136 del builds onto the UN Population Division's Family Planning Estimation Model and uses data from mult
137                    An updated version of the Family Planning Estimation Tool (FPET) was used to const
138 ic surgery residency for policies related to family-planning, fertility, or child-bearing.
139 raceptive use, and unmet need and demand for family planning for 29 states and union territories in I
140 quality of policies and resources related to family planning for physician trainees.
141 have become part of the treatment algorithm: family planning for women with CML and stopping therapy
142 may be helpful for individual counseling and family planning for women with prior CeAD.
143 opoietic cell transplantation (alloHCT) make family planning for young adult cancer survivors an impo
144 mergency management, genetic counselling and family planning, for patients with NDI.
145 s for maternal and newborn health, excluding family planning, for the countries with the lowest HDI,
146          The effect of childhood glaucoma on family planning formed a novel QoL theme and included wo
147  of integrating PrEP delivery within routine family planning (FP) clinics to serve as a platform to e
148       Data on pregnancy intention and use of family planning (FP) is scarce in Papua New Guinea (PNG)
149 dies have suggested that improving access to family planning (FP) may improve contraceptive use and r
150                          Recent increases in family planning (FP) use have been reported among women
151  using traditional contraceptive methods for family planning (FP).
152                                The effect of family planning from the perspective of the caregiver fo
153 ventions, including clean water, sanitation, family planning, girls' education, and social safety net
154 asked to share their perceptions of personal family planning goals, support currently in place, famil
155 pass urologic care in order to achieve their family planning goals.
156  perceptions may affect specialty choice and family planning goals.
157 ion, malaria treatment, bednet distribution, family planning, growth monitoring, and health education
158                                              Family planning had consistent policies but only recent
159 S. funding restrictions on supply and use of family planning has received less attention.
160 enda, international funding and promotion of family planning has waned in the past decade.
161  newborn health, child health, immunisation, family planning, HIV/AIDS, and malaria.
162 improve coverage of health services, such as family planning, IFA, and antimalarial programs, are nee
163 riented, highly focused health programmes in family planning, immunisation, oral rehydration therapy,
164                         The London Summit on Family Planning in 2012 inspired the Family Planning 202
165 d to share their thoughts and experiences on family planning in a medical career, family building goa
166                                 Promotion of family planning in countries with high birth rates has t
167  decline in the prevalence of unmet need for family planning in India from NFHS-4 to 5 (from 12.9 to
168 ow a significant reduction in unmet need for family planning in Manipur (17.8%), Nagaland (13.5%), an
169 e was low (median 0.20, range from -0.03 for family planning in Senegal to 0.40 for ANC in Tanzania).
170 evelopment Goals makes greater investment in family planning in these countries compelling.
171      The primary endpoints were met need for family planning in women aged 15-49 years, proportion of
172 orn, and child mortality, and unmet need for family planning, in which we used a health systems evalu
173  those that consider abortion as a method of family planning, increases abortion prevalence in sub-Sa
174                We assessed current levels of family planning indicators and changes between 2012 and
175 ates and projections of levels and trends in family planning indicators for subpopulations.
176 ysis, we compiled a comprehensive dataset of family-planning indicators among WRA from 1,247 national
177                                Monitoring of family-planning indicators for all women, not just MWRA,
178 lity in the last 12 months (whether received family planning information or not) were associated with
179                  Secondary outcomes included family planning initiation at 12, 14, 16, and 20 weeks p
180                          The average time to family planning initiation was reduced to 5.9 weeks (SD
181               Those providing health care to families planning international adoption should know abo
182 ding unintended and adolescent pregnancy and family planning; international reproductive health surve
183 fforts should be given to maternity care and family planning interventions for achieving the UN's Sus
184    Some of the greatest coverage gaps are in family planning, interventions addressing newborn mortal
185                        Better integration of family planning into HIV care services is needed.
186 ily Medicine program, which fully integrates family planning into residency training, had significant
187 sing is political willingness to incorporate family planning into the development arena.
188                                              Family planning is a shared responsibility, but availabl
189 ime to family build in a medical career, (2) family planning is a taboo topic, (3) surgical specialti
190                                       Timely family planning is important for women at risk of POF.
191                                              Family planning is one of the four pillars of the Safe M
192  to contraception and ensuring that need for family planning is satisfied are essential for achieving
193                                              Family planning is, however, associated with the spread
194 ewborn, and child health services, including family planning, is needed.
195 t and a larger reduction in relationship and family planning keywords relative to lower-income countr
196 accepted guidelines related to fertility and family planning, leaving critical gaps for trainees.
197  Questions regarding factors associated with family planning, maternity leave, and discrimination wer
198  ratios in the Maternal and Child Health and Family Planning (MCH-FP) area (which has received extens
199 atlab, Bangladesh, maternal and child health/family planning (MCH/FP) program afforded a 12-y period
200 lence, trends, and the impact of exposure to family planning messages (FPM) on contraceptive use (CU)
201                                              Family planning messaging for this context should be dev
202 avenues for promoting the appropriate use of family planning method using electronic media remain cri
203  for this analysis is initiation of a modern family planning method within 8 weeks postpartum.
204  of respondents had improved knowledge about family planning methods and the benefits of contraceptiv
205  Forty-four percent of CBRHAs were providing family planning methods at the time of the training and
206    Condoms and vasectomy are male-controlled family planning methods but suffer from limitations in c
207 mutation and its effect on public health and family planning, most FX premutation carriers are unawar
208  genetic cause of CMT is often necessary for family planning, natural history studies, and for entry
209 ty and require special attention as to their family planning needs, reproductive health, and smoking
210  to quantify the gaps that remain in meeting family-planning needs among all WRA.
211 e observed that large gaps remain in meeting family-planning needs.
212 CI: [0.461 to 0.849], p-value = 0.003)); and family planning (new and repeat family planning consulta
213                         Increased funding to family planning, nutrition, and immunisation projects we
214                                              Family planning, obstetrics/gynecology (OB/GYN), or sexu
215 .11 billion (95% UI 1.07-1.16) have need for family planning; of those, 842 million (95% UI 800-893)
216 .63 of 1 in sick-child care to 0.75 of 1 for family planning on average.
217 uting to delayed childbearing, and impact of family planning on career decisions.
218 s old, neither she nor her husband had had a family planning operation, and she resided in a trial vi
219 l pregnancies are unintended; thus, existing family planning options are inadequate.
220                       Genetic counseling and family planning options may be important.
221 e ophthalmologists regarding infertility and family planning options.
222 e recruited women aged 18-25 years attending family planning or abortion care visits and not desiring
223 n attending a New Orleans, Louisiana, public family planning or sexually transmitted disease clinic f
224 ndings suggest that curbing US assistance to family planning organisations, especially those that con
225 ocial safety nets, and increase in uptake of family planning, particularly among adolescent girls.
226 raception use, socioeconomic inequalities in family planning persist.
227 te global efforts, an unsatisfied demand for family planning persists in sub-Saharan Africa.
228 ome locations raises the question of whether family planning policies should aim to expand method mix
229 trends, pregnancy prevention initiatives and family planning policies that address the special needs
230 ries already have appropriate population and family-planning policies but are receiving too little in
231                             Although India's family planning policy has resulted in a substantial red
232 rently thought and that the effectiveness of family planning policy targeting may be weakened by the
233 ting for malaria among under-5 children, and family planning practices of caregivers.
234 m planners can tailor interventions to match family planning preferences and create more sustainable
235                             Those related to family planning, pregnancy intention, and reproductive h
236          They were asked questions regarding family planning, pregnancy outcomes, parenthood, and gen
237 allenges in work-life integration related to family planning, pregnancy, and lactation.
238                                              Family planning prevents unplanned pregnancies while pro
239                                  The Title X Family Planning Program is a US federal grant program de
240 ates from the Texas Medicaid fee-for-service family-planning program, Texas excluded them from a stat
241        Policy makers should strive to tailor family planning programmes to the preferences of the gro
242                        In the past 40 years, family-planning programmes have played a major part in r
243                    The potential benefits of family planning programs and factors contributing to gai
244                                              Family planning programs are believed to have substantia
245                                              Family planning programs are often justified by claims t
246 cation - have long been utilized by national family planning programs to create awareness about contr
247 wn that MCP causes significant disruption to family planning programs worldwide, its consequences for
248 takeholders also identified malaria control, family planning programs, and continued strengthening of
249                                    Voluntary family-planning programs reduce unplanned pregnancies by
250 eptive prevalence rate (mCPR) and demand for family planning satisfied by modern methods (mDFPS) in 4
251               The proportion of the need for family planning satisfied by modern methods, Sustainable
252                                   Demand for family planning satisfied was defined as the proportion
253 ated contraceptive prevalence and demand for family planning satisfied.
254  for contraceptive prevalence and demand for family planning satisfied.
255                                 A study on a family planning service and one on an education reform r
256 er analyzes the link between foreign aid for family planning services and a broad set of health outco
257  SVN babies, within the context of access to family planning services and addressing social determina
258 nd unsafe abortion, including investments in family planning services and safe abortion care, are cru
259 ly improved in areas with improved access to family planning services compared with outcomes in contr
260  significantly lower in the area with better family planning services compared with the comparison ar
261 sure adolescent confidentiality in obtaining family planning services may protect youth from future a
262            We aimed to assess the effects of family planning services on abortion rates in two simila
263  Ghana, have shown that increasing access to family planning services reduces fertility and improves
264 woman are addressed, as is the importance of family planning services to those about to be released.
265      Approximately one billion women require family planning services worldwide, 842 million women ar
266 that selection of cost-effective delivery of family planning services would still meet much of the ne
267                      In addition to suitable family planning services, information and counselling sh
268 d researchers, since it has implications for family planning services, prevention of obstetric compli
269  there is widespread availability of quality family planning services.
270 be provided in combination with good quality family planning services.
271 ly planning will create challenges to expand family-planning services fast enough to fulfil the growi
272 as received extensive services in health and family planning since 1977) with those in the comparison
273 gical specialties; and (4) need for tangible family planning supports in training.
274 role of mentorship, and knowledge of current family planning supports.
275 fective, safe, and reversible is desired for family planning throughout the world.
276 ncrease in the number of women with need for family planning to 1.19 billion (95% UI 1.13-1.26) and i
277 changes in maternal and newborn survival and family planning, to inform priorities to end preventable
278 ding community-based care and integration of family planning training are associated with greater odd
279 ith-based hospitals may hinder comprehensive family planning training for medical students during Ob/
280 communities randomised as part of a previous family planning trial in this cohort.
281                               Obstetrics and family planning trials demonstrate improved representati
282                           We also found high family planning uptake rates for both groups, with highe
283 nal education, access to economic resources, family planning uptake, and increasing birth intervals i
284 ention group than in the control group after family planning visits (7.9 vs 15.4 per 100 person-years
285 effect on pregnancy rates in women attending family planning visits (hazard ratio 0.54, 95% CI 0.34-0
286 th issues during one clinical encounter (eg, family planning visits, including testing for HIV and ot
287  group versus 393 cells/mm3 (SD = 64) in the family planning voucher group.
288 randomized and enrolled equally to receive a family planning voucher or standard of care (control).
289  indicate that a well-structured, time-bound family planning voucher program appeared to increase ear
290                 We evaluated the effect of a family planning voucher, inclusive of immediate postpart
291  3, 2%; P = 0.002) compared to those given a family planning voucher.
292                                 Met need for family planning was greater in the intervention clusters
293                       By 8 weeks postpartum, family planning was initiated in 144 (91%) participants
294 globally, yet less than half of the need for family planning was met in Middle and Western Africa.
295  majority said that in China decisions about family planning were shared by the couple (82%).
296 ther reproductive health activities, such as family planning, which has been the focus of recent worl
297            Medical students considered their family planning while deliberating among specialty choic
298 ncrease in the number of women with need for family planning will create challenges to expand family-
299                   To meet the unmet need for family planning with modern contraceptives would be syne
300 mes associated with residents' perception of family planning within the context of a medical career.

 
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