Heidi Jones, PhD, MPH, City University of New York
In recent years, the public health community has recommended the inclusion of reproductive intention screening into primary care settings, such as through the use of the “One Key Question” (OKQ). Including pregnancy intention questions into primary care could improve pre-conception care for women who desire pregnancy as well as contraceptive choices for women who do ...Read more >
Luciana Hebert, PhD, University of Chicago
Objectives: The objectives of this study were to investigate how young women perceive and experience anal intercourse, and how it fits into their sexual and reproductive health behaviors. Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted with 29 young women ages 18-24 years who reported any lifetime experience of anal intercourse. Interviews lasted no more than 90 minutes ...Read more >
Jeanelle Sheeder, PhD, MSPH, University of Colorado
This mid-career mentorship project will support the development of an online research mentorship toolkit. At the University of Colorado, we have developed a successful research program in family planning. A significant contributor to the success we have achieved is the inclusion of mentees on virtually every project and at every level. This process has been ...Read more >
Ushma Upadhyay, PhD, MPH, University of California, San Francisco
Objectives: This study aimed to examine the distance that low-income women travel to obtain an abortion in California, and how the distance they travel influences their post-abortion care – both follow-up and emergency department visits. Methods: We utilized a dataset from California’s state Medicaid program, Medi-Cal, containing claims from every fee-for-service abortion covered in 2011 ...Read more >
Kristen Shellenberg, PhD, MPH, Ipas
Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine the proportion of women, presenting for an abortion, who could accurately determine whether their pregnancy was =13 weeks gestation using a gestational wheel. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study with women attending four facilities in Ghana. Interviewers administered a questionnaire and then women were seen by ...Read more >
Lauren Chernick, MD, Columbia University
Objective: To determine the feasibility and effect size of an emergency department (ED)- based intervention using text messaging (TM) to improve contraception initiation among underserved adolescent females at high risk of pregnancy. Methods: This was a prospective pilot randomized controlled study. Eligible females were 14–19 years old, sexually active, presenting for reproductive health complaints and ...Read more >
Rachel Jones, PhD, MPH, Guttmacher Institute
Background: Some women must travel substantial distances in order to access abortion services, and this can present a barrier to care. This study assesses how far abortion patients traveled to a provider in 2008 and which groups were more likely to travel farther. Methods: We used data from a national sample of 8,338 abortion patients ...Read more >
Maria Catrina Jaime, PhD, MPH, University of California, Davis
Adolescent childbearing is a public health concern with significant consequences for teen parents and their children. As prior teen pregnancy prevention efforts have primarily focused on teen mothers with limited attention to teen fathers, gaps remain in understanding male pregnancy intentions, views of abortion, and influences on contraceptive use. Rigid norms about masculinity have been ...Read more >
Emily Godfrey, MD, MPH, University of Washington
Population-based registries are essential public health information systems that provide data to support improvements in patient care and clinical decision-making. There are significant gaps in the data around contraceptive safety and efficacy for women with complex medical conditions. As medical advances in the US allow women with complex medical conditions to live through their reproductive ...Read more >
Madina Agenor, ScD, MPH, Harvard University
Transmasculine individuals – i.e., people assigned a female sex at birth who self-identify as men, male, transgender men, female-to-male (FTM), or a non-binary gender identity along the masculine continuum – are at risk of unintended pregnancy. However, transmasculine people face substantial barriers to health care that may undermine their access to and utilization of contraceptive ...Read more >