The Pop Reporter®
Volume 2, Number 29
22 July 2002
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH LAW AND POLICY
US Will Withhold $34 Million for UN's Family
Planning Effort (news article)
The United States will not pay $34 million it earmarked for UN family
planning programs overseas, an initiative aimed at controlling population
but one that conservative groups charge tolerates abortions and
forced sterilizations in China.
Taiwanese
Government Says Chinese Officials Order Abortions, Sterilizations
for Chinese Women Married to Taiwanese Men (news article)
Chinese officials have ordered some Chinese women who are married
to Taiwanese men visiting China to undergo abortions or surgical
sterilizations if they have violated China's "one-child" policy,
according to a Taiwanese government document, Taiwan's Taipei Times
reports.
Bush Names Gay Physician Chief of AIDS Policy
Office (news article)
Joseph O'Neill is taking over the helm of President Bush's office
on AIDS policy.
Japanese
Health Minister Recommends That IVF Be Covered by National Health
Insurance (news article)
In an attempt to "boost" the nation's birth rate, Japanese Health
Minister Chikara Sakaguchi recommended to a parliamentary committee
that national insurance coverage include fertility treatments.
Politicians
Accused of Condoning FGM (news article)
Politicians have been blamed of condoning female circumcision for
fear of displeasing their supporters. A workshop attended by Marakwet
leaders was told that politicians support the rite to protect their
positions.
HIV/AIDS:
NGOs Criticize Lack Of Political Commitment At Barcelona (news
article)
Nongovernmental organizations attending the 14th International AIDS
Conference in Barcelona, Spain, voiced disappointment that the conference
ended without any firm political commitment or new pledges to the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.
UK: Testing
Plan Over HIV Nurse Fears (news article)
Currently, health workers do not have to undergo an HIV test before
working in the UK. But, fears that hundreds of HIV-positive nurses
may have come to work in the UK may prompt compulsory testing of
all new health staff.
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
Strategic
Assessment of Reproductive Health in the Dominican Republic
(research report)
This report documents the findings of a strategic assessment of
reproductive health in the Dominican Republic. This participatory
study was designed to identify strengths, prioritize problems, and
work with community, governmental, and nongovernmental stakeholders
in order to develop recommendations for strategic interventions
to improve reproductive health in the Dominican Republic.
A
Framework to Assist Countries in the Development and Strengthening
of National and District Health Plans and Programs in Reproductive
Health (research report)
This framework gives managers and policy-makers suggestions that
can assist in developing national plans to address priority reproductive
health issues. Based on the experiences of country experts, it incorporates
many different lessons learned. Attached to the framework narrative
is an appendix outlining the available WHO reference documents,
manuals, and assessment and intervention tools. These are generic
guidelines and may need to be adapted to specific country and program
needs. Each resource is accompanied by a brief description of its
purpose and content.
Syphilis:
Old Problem, New Strategy (research article)
Infectious syphilis is a disease of considerable public health importance,
with overwhelming health effects if it is not treated. These include
cardiovascular and neurological disease and adverse pregnancy outcomes,
such as stillbirth and congenital syphilis. Further, concurrent
infection with syphilis can facilitate transmission of HIV. Syphilis
is most infectious through sexual contact during the primary or
secondary stages, but transmission can also occur during the early
latent stage. Syphilis is preventable and treatable with effective
and inexpensive antibiotics. The possible resurgence of infectious
syphilis, a disease previously believed to be close to eradication,
is a matter of increasing global concern.
When Does It Make Sense to Consider Integrating STI and HIV
Services with Family Planning Services? (research article) HTML
PDF
The authors of this article contend that not all services should
be integrated in all situations, and that even some potentially
integrable services should sometimes be offered separately. At least
three compelling factors argue against totally integrating STI and
HIV services into family planning.
Venous
Thromboembolism in Young Women: Role of Thrombophilic Mutations
and Oral Contraceptive Use (research abstract)
Related news article: Gene Variants Interact with
Pill to Raise Clot Risk
Birth control pills are known to slightly increase the risk of blood
clots, but the risk is higher in women who have a variation in one
or both of two genes involved in blood clotting, the results of
a new Italian study suggest.
Inconsistent
Use of Oral Contraceptives in Rural Bangladesh (PubMed abstract)
A total of 801 rural OC users were included in this study in rural
Bangladesh. Multivariate analysis revealed that Muslim women were
60 percent more likely to be inconsistent OC users compared to their
non-Muslim counterparts. Women who lacked knowledge about contraindications
were 60 percent more likely to take the pill inconsistently than
were women who had the knowledge. Women who were not visited by
family planning workers or did not have access to mass media were
40 percent more likely to be inconsistent OC users
Son
Preference and Fertility in China (PubMed abstract)
This paper examines the effect of son preference on the hazards
of having a second and a third birth.
Contraceptive
Use Behavior Among Never Married Young Women Who are Seeking Pregnancy
Termination in Beijing (PubMed abstract)
This was a cross sectional study conducted in 1999 in Beijing, China.
A total of 306 unmarried young women, aged 18 to 24 years, were
interviewed. Only 13 percent of the young women insisted on contraceptive
use, and almost an equal proportion occasionally (26 percent) or
never used (27 percent) contraceptives. Among 224 women who had
contraceptive use during the past 12 months, the methods used most
often were condom (49 percent), withdrawal (28 percent), and the
rhythm method (16 percent).
FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH NEWS
What
is NuvaRing? (patient information)
NuvaRing is a flexible combined contraceptive vaginal ring used
to prevent pregnancy. NuvaRing contains a combination of a progestin
and estrogen, two kinds of female hormones. You insert the ring
in your vagina and leave it there for three weeks. You then remove
it for a one-week ring-free period. After the ring is inserted,
it releases a continuous low dose of hormones into your body.
Molecular
"Spark of Life" Discovered (news article)
The molecule that triggers the fertilisation of a mammalian egg
and prompts it to begin growing and dividing has been discovered.
The identification of this "spark of life" is significant for work
on infertility treatments, male contraceptives and cloning.
Abortion Pill Use in Germany on the Rise
(news article)
The number of German women using the pregnancy-terminating drug
mifepristone, also known as RU-486, increased by 21% over the previous
year.
HIV / AIDS RESEARCH
Combat AIDS: HIV and the World's Armed Forces HTML
PDF
(research report)
Soldiers are both vulnerable to HIV and linked to the spread of
HIV, particularly in situations of conflict. This publication outlines
some of the reasons why and includes material from focus group discussions
with soldiers in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, and South-east
Asia. It introduces some of the issues involved in, and approaches
to working with, the military, including a section on HIV testing
and on HIV prevention in the armed forces.
Isolation of a Human Gene that Inhibits HIV-1
Infection and is Suppressed by the Viral Vif protein (research
article)
Related news article: Human
Gene May Lead To Treatment To Block Infection
A gene, CEM15, was shown to stop the spread of HIV, but the virus
usually disables the gene by using a small HIV protein called Vif.
Preventing
HIV Infection, Promoting Reproductive Health (research report)
HIV/AIDS threatens to destroy a whole generation of leaders, workers,
parents and youth, and to create a generation of orphans in the
worst-affected countries. In many countries, the infection is creeping
through the population, preparing to strike full-force. Prevention
is about striking first. Reproductive health information, services
and supplies enable people to avoid HIV infection and to protect
themselves, their partners and their unborn children from this deadly
virus.
HIV / AIDS NEWS
AIDS
Drug Prices Drop Sharply but Unevenly in Latin America and Caribbean
(press release)
Even with greatly reduced prices, many countries cannot afford to
provide antiretroviral drugs to all in need. Out of at least 475,000
people in need in the region, only 170,000 currently have access
to the drugs, mostly in Brazil. And the incidence of infection continues
to increase.
African
First Ladies Launch Historic Organization to Fight HIV/AIDS
(press release)
In an unprecedented meeting, the First Ladies of 18 African countries
will formally establish the "African First Ladies Organization Against
HIV/AIDS."
HIV-Protective Gene May Boost Hepatitis C Infection
(news article)
Patients with a gene variation that protects them from HIV infection
may be more prone to developing the liver infection hepatitis C,
German researchers report.
Senegal Study Finds Anti-HIV Treatment Effective
(news article)
Findings from a preliminary study suggest that a drug combination
that is the gold standard of HIV treatment in the developed world
can help patients in developing countries as well.
Russia Struggles to Treat AIDS Patients
(news article)
While the US spends between $10,000 and $15,000 per HIV patient
annually, Russia manages $45 per reported AIDS case. Frustrated
by a lack of money and resources, Russian doctors can do little
to comfort the growing number of AIDS patients in their wards.
Fresh
out of Conflict, Sierra Leoneans Face New War with Micro-sized,
Formidable Foe: The HIV Virus (news article)
War-ravaged Sierra Leone finds itself on the brink of an HIV/AIDS
epidemic: Five per cent of the population is infected; the health
system has long since collapsed.
MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH RESEARCH
Interpretation
of Rubella Serology in Pregnancy--Pitfalls and Problems (research
article)
Rubella acquired in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy is associated
with a 90% risk of congenital malformations. Case studies show that
results of rubella IgM assays conducted on serum samples from pregnant
women should always be interpreted with caution. Any history of
rash or contact with rash, previous rubella testing, and history
of vaccination should be taken into consideration. Tests for rubella
IgM are not indicated unless there is a history of rash in a pregnant
woman or contact with a rubella-like rash. Unnecessary tests for
rubella IgM may lead to problems in interpretation. Close collaboration
between obstetricians and virologists is essential at all stages
to avoid errors and unnecessary terminations and to decide whether
prenatal diagnosis is indicated.
An
Epidemiological Study of RSV in the Gambia (research article)
Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) is an important cause of acute
lower respiratory infection among children ages two and under in
the Gambia, leading to hospital admission. Morbidity is considerable
and efforts at prevention worthwhile.
Pregnancy
Complications and Maternal Cardiovascular Risk: Opportunities for
Intervention and Screening? (research article)
Plentiful evidence now links low birth weight due to intrauterine
growth restriction and increased risk of vascular disease in later
adult life. This is considered to be partly the result of programming
through fetal nutrition. In contrast, much less attention has been
focused on the relation between adverse pregnancy outcomes, such
as pre-eclampsia, gestational diabetes, preterm delivery, and intrauterine
growth restriction, and the mother's subsequent health, and interesting
data are now increasingly linking the maternal vascular, metabolic,
and inflammatory complications of pregnancy with an increased risk
of vascular disease in later life. This article summarizes the emerging
evidence to support this fascinating concept, notes important areas
for further research, and discusses potential practical implications.
Fetal
Growth Restriction: An Evidence-Based Approach: Part II (research
article)
Which small-for-gestational-age fetuses are at increased risk for
irreversible perinatal complications and death? Having emphasized
the importance of early diagnosis of FGR in Part I, the authors
now focus on antepartum surveillance and assess the evidence for
various management strategies.
MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH NEWS
Nigeria:
Minister Blames Fake Drugs, Poor Care For High Maternal Mortality
(news article)
Nigeria's high maternal mortality rate is being aggravated by the
prevalence of fake drugs and poorly trained health workers, said
Nigeria's Minister of Women Affairs and Youth Development.
MEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH
Semen
Quality and Spermatozoal DNA Integrity in Survivors of Childhood
Cancer: A Case-Control Study (research article)
This study found that sperm concentration is reduced after treatment
for cancer. However, the sperm that is produced seems to carry as
much healthy DNA as those produced by a healthy population, suggesting
that assisted conception can be considered as a treatment option
for such men.
MEN'S HEALTH NEWS
Insulin-Like
Growth Factor I Pathway and Prostate Cancer (news article)
Levels of IGF-I and IGFBP-3 may predict the risk of developing advanced-stage
prostate cancer, but their utility for identifying patients with
incident cancer may be limited.
Pharaonic Fertility Myth Fades as Egyptian Men
Line Up for Viagra (news article)
In a coffee shop in Cairo, the conversation over a game of chess
turns to Egyptian men's libidos and the government's legalization
of Viagra.
POPULATION NEWS
Pakistan
Needs Sound Population Management Says President Musharraf (news
article)
"Pakistan cannot be pulled out of the poverty trap with 3 million
additional births every year. Efforts to bring down the birth rate
must be pursued vigorously through sound population management,"
said President Pervez Musharraf.
Kenya's
Population Growth Rate Set to Drop (news article)
Kenya's Population growth rate is to drop from the current 2.8 percent
per annum to 2 percent annually by the year 2010. Measures are being
taken to curb population growth rate as an indirect strategy of
reducing high level poverty in the country.
Population
of United Arab Emirates Climbs 7.4 Percent in 2001 (news article)
The UAE's population surged by nearly 7.4 percent in 2001 as more
foreign workers streamed in and the government pushed ahead with
a policy to encourage UAE nationals to have more children, according
to official estimates. From around 3.24 million at the end of 2000,
the country's population totaled nearly 3.48 million at the end
of 2001.
More
With Less Means Deeper Poverty (news article)
At current growth rates, the Philippine population would hit 85
million by 2005, growing at an average rate of 2.1 percent. This
is way ahead of the average 1.4 percent growth in per capita gross
national product. This simply means that there will be more people
to feed with less available food. From a quality-of-life point of
view, this translates to that dreadfully unpalatable phrase: deeper
poverty.
Nigeria:
What Fertility Has to Do With Number (news article)
The thought of having only one child is repulsive to Iyabo Akoka,
who already has two sons and would want two daughters in future.
Discussing the issue of declining fertility, which is being experienced
all over the world, she exclaimed: "I am an African woman. How can
I have only a child?"
WOMEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH
Menopausal
Hormone Replacement Therapy and Risk of Ovarian Cancer (research
abstract)
Related news article: Estrogen Hormone Therapy
Ups Risk of Ovarian Cancer
Women who used estrogen-only replacement therapy, particularly for
10 or more years, were at significantly increased risk of ovarian
cancer in this study. Women who used short-term estrogen-progestin-only
replacement therapy were not at increased risk, but risk associated
with short-term and longer-term estrogen-progestin replacement therapy
warrants further investigation.
Benign Breast
Pain in Women: A Practical Approach to Evaluation and Treatment
(research abstract)
Researchers have found no clear hormonal or specific pathological
processes that explain cyclical breast pain. Some investigations
did find associations between breast pain and premenstrual syndrome,
fibrocystic breast disease, and caffeine intake. Initial treatment
with reassurance, a well-fitted brassiere, caffeine reduction, and
primrose oil should be tried before prescribing pharmaceutical agents.
Medications such as danazol, bromocriptine, and tamoxifen are effective,
but often have side effects and contraindications.
WOMEN'S HEALTH NEWS
UK Experts: Continue Hrt Trial, Despite US Results
(news article)
British scientists recommended on Friday that a major trial of hormone
replacement therapy (HRT) involving up to 22,000 women continue
despite a US study that showed the therapy increases the risk of
breast cancer, stroke, blood clots, and heart disease. Britain's
Medical Research Council said the committee in charge of the trial
believed there were "no strong ethical or scientific reasons to
stop the trial" and that there were "still important questions about
the balance of risks and benefits from taking HRT long-term that
have not yet been answered."
Breastfeeding
Could Slash Breast Cancer Risk (news article)
Western women could reduce their breast cancer risk by nearly 60
percent if they returned to pre-industrial levels of fertility and
breastfeeding. The new findings help explain why breast cancer,
virtually unknown 200 years ago, is now a major killer.
Kenya:
Workshop Told of Secret 'Cutting' of New Mothers (news article)
Traditional birth attendants secretly circumcise young women who
give birth for the first time without their knowledge, a conference
was told.
Women
Should Take Health Steps Besides Hormone Replacement to Prevent
Illness: WHO (press release)
Reacting to recent findings that cast doubt on the efficacy of certain
forms of hormone replacement therapy for women, the WHO recommended
safe preventive measures, such as quitting smoking and taking up
exercise, for those at risk of bone loss and other diseases.
YOUTH RESEARCH
Youth
Survey Question Bank (Web site/database)
Doing research on reproductive health or HIV/AIDS among youth in
developing nations? This resource contains questions from youth
studies carried out by researchers worldwide. Questions continue
to be added, both to existing categories, and as new topics relevant
to young people emerge. Users may select questions free of charge
as they develop new data collection instruments, modifying them
as appropriate for local conditions.
Report
on the Interaction Task Force on the Prevention of Sexual Exploitation
of Displaced Children (research report)
This report discusses actions that humanitarian agencies should
take to prevent the abuse of displaced children. Scarcity of relief
supplies, exploitation of power, the vulnerability of the displaced,
the lack of awareness of their rights, and weaknesses in training,
monitoring, and accountability of UN and partner agencies have all
contributed to the situation.
Drop
in HIV and Syphilis Among Young Ethiopian Women (research summary)
Prevalence of HIV-1 infection and syphilis dropped substantially
among 15- to 24-year-old women attending antenatal clinics at inner-city
health centers in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
YOUTH NEWS
UN Concerned for Treatment of Detained Trafficked
Girls in Guatemala (news article)
Two Special Rapporteurs from the UN have contacted the Guatemalan
government concerned that foreign trafficked girls used for sexual
exploitation in Guatemala are immediately jailed when rescued from
brothels as if they were criminals.
Child Marriage Means Child Labor For Daughters (news article)
Although the age of marriage for women in India, particularly in
urban areas, is rising to approximately 19 years of age, according
to the 1998-99 National Family Health Survey, one-third of all adolescent
girls are married by the age of 15.
US College Students Misjudge Scope of HIV Epidemic
(news article)
Many US college students may underestimate the proportion of people
with HIV who live in Africa, while overestimating the number living
with the virus in the US, new survey findings suggest. They also
feel that the US has a greater duty to provide drugs for treating
HIV/AIDS to people in North America than to those with the disease
in Africa.
BOOKS / BOOK REVIEWS
This
Man's Pill: Reflections on the 50th Birthday of the Pill (book
review)
"This Man's Pill" is a memoir by Dr. Carl Djerassi, professor of
chemistry at Stanford University. When he was 28 years old, Djerassi
led a team of steroid biochemists at Syntex laboratories in Mexico
to synthesize the oral progestational agent norethindrone (17-alpha
ethynyl-19-nortestosterone). This accomplishment enabled the clinical
development of oral contraceptive pills.
PROFILES / SPECIAL REPORTS
HIVTools Web Site
The HIVTools Web site provides up-to-date information on the HIVTools
Research Group's activities, as well as the latest downloads for:
HIVTools/UNAIDS costing guidelines; HIVTools mathematical models
for estimating the impact of different HIV prevention interventions;
publications and reports; and presentations.
Improving the
Quality of Care for Women with Pregnancy-Induced Hypertension Reduces
Costs in Tver, Russia
(USAID-supported Study)
The Quality Assurance Project/Russia implemented a quality improvement
demonstration project in 1998 at three hospitals in Tver Oblast,
Russia. This study reports the results of that effort.
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