The Pop Reporter®
Volume 1, Number 17
30 July 2001
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH POLICY
Poland's Tough Abortion Law Comes Under Fire at Women's Rights Tribunal
Italy: Battle Over Abortion Law Continues
FAMILY PLANNING/REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
Oral Contraceptives Appear Ineffective in Prevention of Ovarian Cancer Among Carriers of Breast Cancer Genes, Study SaysSurgery Lets Cervical Cancer Patients Have Babies
A First Pregnancy May Be Difficult to Achieve After Long-Term Use of an IUD
HPV
(Human Papillomavirus) and Cervical Cancer ![]()
Public Health Officials Worry That Report on Condoms Will Dissuade People From Using Them
Female Condoms Remain Structurally Sound After Being Washed and Reused as Many as Seven Times
HIV/AIDS
HIV/AIDS: Tanzania Reports Success In Efforts To Combat Disease
Vaccine Partially Blocks Transmission of HIV-Like Virus in Monkeys
UNMEE/EDF Start HIV/AIDS Training Program
Launch of Global AIDS Fund at G-8 Summit Gets Mixed Reaction
Fertility Desires and Intentions of HIV-Positive Men and Women
HIV/AIDS: UN Foundation Launches "Citizens' Fund"
Education in Africa Threatened by AIDS
MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH
Being Underweight Does Not Raise the Risk of Most Pregnancy ComplicationsRecent Tragedies Focus Attention on Postpartum Depression
POPULATION
Opinion: Growing Numbers, the Forgotten Perspective at BonnSENEGAL: Second Delay Possible For UNFPA-Backed Census
WOMEN'S HEALTH
More Women Needed in AIDS Research, Doctors Say
Experts Advise Against Hormones for Women's Hearts
YOUTH
CDC Reports Dramatic Drop in U.S. Teen Birth Rates
Improving
Adolescents' Reproductive Health in Bangladesh
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Levels of Sexual Experience Among U.S. Teenagers Have Declined for the First Time in Three Decades
PROFILES/SPECIAL REPORTS
Tested To Their Limit: Sexual Harassment in Schools and Educational
Institutions in Kenya
Women striving for higher education are tested to
their limit by the hostile social and economic environments
that define student life. "The attitudes of male students
are disturbing," says Arthur Okwemba, a recent graduate
of Egerton University, Njoro, about 200 km from Nairobi.
"The prevailing attitude is that a woman is at best
a parasite on the financial resources of a man and
that she should at least show her appreciation by
giving sexual favors," he says. At male students'
hostels, while gathering information on sexual harassment
at the Universities of Egerton, Kenyatta (in Nairobi)
and Maseno, he encountered lewd graffiti and picture
pin-ups of naked women on the walls. This report details
the difficulties women in Kenya encounter in the educational
system.
Hopkins Report: New Informed Choice Strategy for Developing Countries Guides People to Better Family Planning Decisions
Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health are calling for a new, broader strategy to help people make well-informed choices about family planning and protection against HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The new strategy urges efforts in five areas: government policies, communication programs, access to contraception, family planning program leadership and management, and counseling. The proposal, addressed to policy-makers and health care providers working in and for developing countries, appears in the latest issue of Population Reports®.
The full-text report can be found at http://www.populationreports.org/j50edsum.shtml.
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