Bhavik Kumar, MD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Background: In 2011, Texas cut its family planning budget, resulting in a patchwork system of access to family planning services, and increased contraception costs for many patients. Although much of this budget was restored in 2013, multiple barriers to care still exist, including a decreased number of clinics providing contraceptive services and the exclusion of ...Read more >
An intrauterine device placed immediately following a delivery can serve as an effective and safe contraceptive strategy in the postpartum period. There is limited evidence that the levonorgestrel intrauterine system may have a higher rate of expulsion compared to the copper intrauterine device; however, rates of expulsion for these 2 intrauterine device types have not ...Read more >
Justin Diedrich, MD, Washington University in St. Louis
Background Highly effective, long-acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) methods have the potential to decrease unintended pregnancies and reduce health disparities. These include the copper-containing intrauterine device (Cu-IUD) and the levonorgestrel-containing IUD (LNG-IUD). The LUCID Study (long-term utilization and continuation of intrauterine devices) sought to describe long-term continuation of the LNG- and Cu-IUD at 48 and 60 ...Read more >
This pilot study will evaluate the ability to recruit and retain participants for a larger, planned cohort to examine clinical contraceptive failure (positive pregnancy test) after quick start LNG IUD insertion when a woman reports unprotected sex 6-14 days prior to insertion with a negative pregnancy test. If this study demonstrates recruitment and high retention ...Read more >
Luu Doan Ireland, MD, MPH, University of California, Los Angeles
Diabetes affects 2% of all pregnancies, and this number is only expected to rise. Diabetes can lead to major complications during pregnancy affecting both the mother and baby. The risk of these complications is higher in unplanned pregnancies. In the past, studies have shown that women with diabetes are less likely than women without diabetes ...Read more >
Valerie French, MD, University of California, San Francisco
This study on abortion referral evaluated how patients navigate the medical system when they desire an abortion and how providers participate in that process. The study had two arms: 1) a patient arm assessing the influence of clinician referral on the time it took a woman to obtain an abortion, and 2) a provider arm ...Read more >
Background: Every year tens of thousands of refugees arrive in the United States. In contrast to other immigrant populations, refugees have often fled war, violence and/or natural disaster. Many refugee women from Somalia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are designated as ‘women-at-risk’ by the United Nations High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR) meaning ...Read more >
Crystal Goldsmith, MD, MPH, University of Southern California
Oral contraceptive pills are the most commonly utilized form of contraception in the United States. However, there are fears about the safety of combined oral contraceptive (COC) pills, particularly regarding the risks of venous thromboembolic events (VTE) among users. Progestin only pills (POP) have relatively few contraindications and are not associated with risk for VTE. ...Read more >
Katherine Whitehouse, DO, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Background: Hemorrhage, the most common complication of dilation and evacuations is estimated to occur in 0.8% to 2.1% of procedures. The rate of hemorrhage increases with gestational age, affecting up to 6.3% of dilation and evacuations performed above 18-weeks gestation. Many practitioners report the use of prophylactic uterotonics, like oxytocin, with dilation and evacuation to ...Read more >
Katharine Simmons, MD, Oregon Health and Science University
Background Nearly all of the 3 million unintended pregnancies in the United States each year result from inconsistent or non-use of contraception. Increasing use of the most effective methods of contraception will reduce unintended pregnancies and their social, medical and economic consequences. The contraceptive etonogestrel implant (ENG implant) is 20 times more effective at pregnancy ...Read more >
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