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The Pop Reporter®

Volume 2, Number 35
3 September 2002


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

China to Implement First National Family Planning Law (news article)
China is to formalize its family planning and population control policies with its first national family planning law, which went into effect on September 1. The new law, which has been 23 years on the drawing board and comprises seven chapters and 47 articles, has detailed provisions on measures to encourage and guarantee family planning, and outlines the public's legal obligations.

China Says No Relaxation of 1 Couple, 1 Child Policy (news article)
China's new family planning law took effect on September 1 amid official media reports that the government will neither tighten nor relax its "one couple, one child" policy.

Peru Looks to Ban Popular Birth Control Method (news article)
Peruvian officials are considering banning tubal ligation, a popular birth-control method, in response to reports of forced sterilizations in the 1990s. Women's rights advocates oppose the change and are calling for compensation for the victims.

Pakistan: Activists Hail Gang-rape Verdict (news article)
Pakistani rights groups hailed the verdict of a local court giving the death sentence to six men who had gang-raped a women on a decision of a village jury, but have urged the government to take concrete steps to eliminate extra-judicial tribunals.

Earth Summit Delegates Struggle to Resolve Issues: Population Growth, Said to be at Crux, is Left Off Agenda (news article)
Criticized for lack of progress, the ministers and delegates of 191 countries dug in last night in a frenzied attempt to settle stubborn, unresolved issues before their presidents and prime ministers take center stage today at the global summit on poverty alleviation and the environment.

Nigerian Couple Sentenced to Stoning (news article)
An Islamic court has sentenced a couple to death by stoning for having an affair, marking the first time in Nigeria that a man has been sentenced to death for adultery.


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RESEARCH

How to Reach Clients of Female Sex Workers: A Survey ''By Surprise'' in Brothels in Dakar, Senegal PDF Format (research article)
The authors describe their sampling techniques and survey procedures used in identifying male clients who frequent brothels to buy sexual services from female sex workers in Dakar, Senegal, with the aim of measuring the prevalence of HIV infection and investigating related risk behaviours.

The Impact of Price Changes on Demand for Family Planning and Reproductive Health Services in Ecuador (research abstract)
Donor funding for family planning and reproductive health has declined in Latin America over the past decade, obliging providers to consider other financing mechanisms, including cost recovery through user fees. Pricing decisions are often difficult for providers, who fear that increased fees will cripple demand and create barriers to access for poor clients.

Reproductive and Child Health Accounts: An Application to Rajasthan (research abstract)
This paper describes resource flows for reproductive and child health (RCH) in the health care system of Rajasthan, India, using the integrating framework of health accounts. It analyzes sources and uses of RCH funds by provider and expenditure category.

Myocardial Infarction and Third Generation Oral Contraceptives: Aggregation of Recent Studies (research abstract)
Related news article: No Birth Control, Heart Attack Link
Women who take third-generation birth control pills containing desogestrel or gestodene show no increased risk for heart attack compared to women who take no birth control pills.


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH NEWS

Inventors Create Condom Which Can Be Fitted in Three Seconds (news article)
Two South Africans have invented a condom which can be unwrapped and fitted within 3 seconds. The applicator, marked for distribution by next year, received a designers award from the South African Bureau of Standards.

Injected Contraceptive Slows Blood Flow (news article)
Women who use an injected contraceptive for extended periods of time may be at increased risk for heart disease because this form of birth control impairs the arteries.

Reproductive Health and Women's Rights Are Key Issues for Sustainable Development Summit (press release)
Reproductive health and women's rights are critical to alleviating poverty and the World Summit on Sustainable Development should say so, speakers at a summit panel discussion stressed.

Diaphragm Put to Test Against HIV (news article)
Taking a new, low-tech tack in the battle against AIDS, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation plans to spend $28 million in southern Africa to test whether the simple latex diaphragm used for birth control also can reduce a woman's risk of HIV infection.

Bill Gates Foundation Gives Grants to Low-Tech Efforts at HIV Prevention (news article)
Low-tech efforts to slow the spread of HIV and give women some control over contraception got a US $46 million boost Wednesday from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Pakistan: Focus on Gender Training for TV Scriptwriters (news article)
A gender training workshop, the first of its kind to be run in Pakistan, is a joint partnership between state-run television, PTV, and the United Nations Development Programme. Established in 1998, the project runs until the end of September this year, with the aim of changing attitudes of both men and women in the media.

Trends in HIV, Gonorrhoea, and Syphilis (letter to the editor)
- Screening for neurosyphilis is recommended
- Sexual health services in general practice can be improved


HIV / AIDS RESEARCH

HIV Infection in Women: Impact on Contraception (PubMed abstract)
Researchers in Sao Paulo, Brazil studied 140 HIV infected women. They observed a significant increase in the knowledge of contraceptive methods after HIV diagnosis. The data suggested that the women who received information had never received it before, or that the diagnosis created a stronger motivation to listen to the counseling offered. A significant increase in the use of contraceptive methods was also found, especially male condoms and tubal ligation.

High Prevalence of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Infections and High Frequency of Multiple HPV Genotypes in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Women in Brazil (research abstract)
A group of 208 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected women in Brazil were studied for the presence of human papillomavirus with the general SPF(10) PCR primer set. The highly sensitive SPF(10) LiPA system shows that a very high proportion of HIV-infected women in Brazil are infected with HPV and often carry multiple HPV genotypes.

Survey of the Knowledge, Attitude and Practice of Nigerian Surgery Trainees to HIV-infected Persons and AIDS Patients PDF Format (research article)
The incidence of HIV infection and AIDS is rising in Nigeria. Surgeons are at risk of occupationally acquired infection as a result of intimate contact with the blood and body fluids of patients. This study set out to determine the knowledge, attitude and risk perception of Nigerian surgery residents to HIV infection and AIDS.


HIV / AIDS NEWS

Editorial on Epidemiology of HIV in China was Misleading (letter to the editor)
Writers argue that a previous editorial painted a somewhat misleading and incomplete picture of the epidemiology of HIV in China.

Russia Counts 3500 New HIV Cases Every Month (news article)
The Interfax News Agency reports that Russia counted 3,569 new cases of HIV infection in May, followed by 3,573 in June.

Medical Activist in China Disappears (news article)
Chinese AIDS activist Wan Yanhai made his share of enemies in the government while exposing the disease's spread through blood-buying businesses that reinjected people with infectious blood. He disappeared last week. Friends say he was last seen leaving a film event for gays and lesbians at a Beijing cafe.

Gay Bathhouses Good Targets for anti-HIV Outreach (news article)
If the activities at one gay bathhouse are any indication, risky sexual behavior appears to be less frequent at these establishments than in the past. But health officials warn that gay and bisexual men who do report having unsafe sex in bathhouses are more likely to be HIV positive.

Kenya: Churches to Launch AIDS War Plan (news article)
The National Council of Churches of Kenya's 3-year strategic plan intends to reduce the HIV/AIDS prevalence by 10 percent.

Thailand to Join Asian Research on Causes of AIDS Stigma (news article)
Thailand will join six other Asia-Pacific countries in conducting ongoing in-depth research into the causes of discrimination against HIV/AIDS sufferers.


MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH RESEARCH

Rating Maternal and Neonatal Health Services in Developing Countries PDF Format (research article)
The authors assessed maternal and neonatal health services in 49 developing countries with the help of 10 to 25 experts in each country. The average rating was only 56. They conclude that maternal health programme efforts in developing countries is seriously deficient, particularly in rural areas. Improving services requires moving beyond policy reform to strengthening implementation of services and to better staff training and health promotion.

Infant Mortality in India: Use of Maternal and Child Health Services in Relation to Literacy Status (research article)
The authors deomonstrate that illiteracy of females had a more detrimental impact on rural than on urban areas. In the event of high female illiteracy, male literacy was beneficial for improving the use of services for reducing infant mortality rate.

Birth Weight and Perinatal Mortality: A Comparison of "Optimal" Birth Weight in Seven Western European Countries (PubMed abstract)
Previous studies have suggested that a population's entire birth weight distribution may be shifted towards higher or lower birth weights, and that optimal birth weight may be lower in populations with a lower average birth weight. The authors evaluated this hypothesis by obtaining data on all singleton births (N = 1,372,092) and extended perinatal deaths (stillbirths plus neonatal deaths; N = 7,900) occurring in Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Scotland, the Netherlands, and Flanders (Belgium) during 1993-1995. Their results confirm those of previous studies that compared two populations. To improve the identification of small babies at high risk of perinatal death, population-specific standards for birth weight should be developed and used.

Maternal Vitamin Use and Reduced Risk of Neuroblastoma (PubMed abstract)
Related news article: New UNC Study Suggests Multivitamin Use During Pregnancy Cuts Childhood Tumor Risk
Previous studies have suggested that maternal vitamin use during pregnancy may reduce the incidence of childhood brain tumors. Using data from a large North American study, researchers investigated maternal vitamin use and neuroblastoma in offspring, a childhood nervous system cancer. Daily vitamin and mineral use in the month before pregnancy and in each trimester was associated with a 30 to 40 percent reduction in risk of neuroblastoma.


MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH NEWS

Africa: A Pain of Labor That Never Ends (news article)
Fistula affects an estimated 2 million women worldwide, with 50,000 to 100,000 new cases each year. The overwhelming majority is in Africa. Nigeria alone has an estimated 1 million victims. Another 200,000 are in Ethiopia. In Niger, the condition is so common, it is the leading cause of divorce nationwide.

Life-Saving Initiative for Newborn Babies (news article)
Struggling with one of the highest child-mortality rates in the world at 104 deaths for every 1,000 live births, Malawi has launched an unconventional care program aimed at saving the lives of newborn babies called the Kangaroo Mother Care program. The program intends to halve the present child mortality rate.

Angola: Progress Toward Poliomyelitis Eradication (press release)
Since the World Health Assembly resolved in 1988 to eradicate poliomyelitis, the estimated number of polio cases worldwide has declined by over 99 percent. Angola began polio eradication activities in 1996. Although polio eradication efforts have been hampered by the country's 27-year-long civil war, both the incidence of polio cases and the geographic circulation of poliovirus in Angola have decreased substantially.

New Guidelines Developed for Health Workers in Indigenous Communities (press release)
Three new guidelines for the application of the strategy of Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) in indigenous communities are being prepared by the Pan American Health Organization.


MEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH

Lack of Effect of a Low-Fat, High-Fruit, -Vegetable, and -Fiber Diet on Serum Prostate-Specific Antigen of Men Without Prostate Cancer: Results From a Randomized Trial (research abstract)
Related news article: Study of Low-Fat, High-Fiber Diet Finds No Effect on PSA Levels in Men Over a Four-Year Period
A low-fat, high-fiber diet heavy in fruits and vegetables has no impact on prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels in men over a 4-year period and does not affect the incidence of prostate cancer, according to a 4-year randomized, case-control study.

Suicide and Marital Status in the United States, 1991-1996: Is Widowhood a Risk Factor? (research abstract)
Related news article: Young Widowers at High Risk of Suicide: Report
Young white men widowed between the ages of 20 and 34 are 17 times more likely to kill themselves than their married peers, new study findings show. This trend is not limited to whites: Among African-American men who are widowed when relatively young, the risk of suicide increases nine-fold relative to their married counterparts.


MEN'S HEALTH NEWS

"Male Menopause" Therapy Hotly Debated (news article)
Just as women find themselves flailing about, knee-deep in controversy over the safety of hormone replacement therapy, men are jumping in.

Smart Human Sperm 'Have Memory' (news article)
If human sperm turn in one direction, they will turn in the opposite direction at the next opportunity demonstrating that they have some kind of memory, a neurobiologist from Zurich has found.


POPULATION NEWS

Afghanistan: Census preparations underway (news article)
Preparations are underway to begin the first ever comprehensive population census in Afghanistan, with the first batch of field workers to be dispatched soon.

Zimbabwe: Census Exercise Hits Snag As Foreigners Refuse to Be Counted (news article)
Some foreign residents in Zimbabwe are refusing to disclose information about themselves to census enumerators, arguing that the census was internal and did not concern them.

Japan's Population at 126 Million (news article)
Japan's population was 126,478,672 as of March 31, up 0.15 percent or 193,867 from a year earlier to mark a record-low increase.


WOMEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH

Adolescent and Adult Soy Intake and Risk of Breast Cancer in Asian-Americans (research abstract)
Related news article: Eating Soy During Adolescence May Reduce Breast Cancer
A population-based, case-control study of breast cancer among Chinese, Japanese and Filipino women in Los Angeles County (USA) was conducted to investigate the role of soy in breast cancer. Results show that high soy intake in childhood in Asian-Americans is associated with reduced breast cancer risk. Risk may be further reduced by intake as an adult.

Myogenic Reactivity is Reduced in Small Renal Arteries Isolated From Relaxin-Treated Rats (research abstract)
Related news article: Pregnancy Hormone Induces Healthy Blood Vessels, Magee-Womens Research Institute Scientists Report
The pregnancy hormone relaxin induces a healthy physiological response in blood vessels, increasing dilation and benefiting blood pressure and kidney function, scientists at Magee-Womens Research Institute report. Finding the key to this physiologic response could have significant implications for the treatment of hypertension and other cardiovascular diseases.


WOMEN'S HEALTH NEWS

Sorting Through the Confusion Over Estrogen (news article)
Why does so much remain unknown about a drug that has been on the market for more than 60 years? And what should patients and physicians make of new findings about hormone replacement therapy?

Computer Predicts Outcomes of Breast Cancer (news article)
A computer system that mimics the way people think has been 'trained' by scientists to forecast the outcome of breast cancer cases. In a preliminary study involving 100 women, the system correctly predicted in almost 9 out of 10 patients whether the disease would spread to other parts of their body and whether they would survive for 5 years without a recurrence of cancer.

Chinese Rural Women Not Shy Over Reproductive Health Problems (news article)
Women in rural China used to keep their reproductive health problems as "private secrets" and seldom went to doctors. Now rural women can get reproductive health checks regularly inlocal family planning service centers.


YOUTH RESEARCH

Predictors of Risky Sexual Behavior in African American Adolescent Girls: Implications for Prevention Interventions (research abstract)
Teens presenting in primary care settings in urban environments seem to be at high risk for HIV, STDs, and substance abuse, and risk reduction strategies should be introduced during the preteen years. An interdisciplinary model of care in primary care settings serving adolescents is clearly indicated, and prevention-oriented interventions aimed at reducing risky behaviors and preventing the development of more significant health, mental health, or substance abuse disorders are needed.

Gender, Family, and the Nutritional Status of Children in Three Culturally Contrasting States of India (research abstract)
The evidence from this work suggests that nutrition programs need to adopt community nutrition interventions that aim resources at young children from families where children with low weight for age z-scores are found to cluster.


YOUTH NEWS

Bangladesh: Adolescents' Reproductive Health (news article)
The reproductive health status of adolescent boys and girls is remarkably low in Bangladesh. Despite rapid social change, women are still lagging far behind men in all aspects. They are suffering from poverty with social and cultural prejudice, gender based violence, lack of education and less access to essential health care facilities. All these contribute to poor reproductive health.

Kenya: Plea for Family Life Education (news article)
More than 10,000 girls drop out of school annually due to unwanted pregnancies, with those in day and mixed schools being the most affected. Some girls are said to opt for abortion to remain in school, risking their lives in the process.

US: Nationwide Advocacy Campaign Launched to Fight Increased Federal Funding for Unproven Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage Programs (press release)
The Sexuality Information and Education Council of the U.S. (SIECUS) announced the launch of its "No New Money" campaign, a nationwide online advocacy campaign, in an effort to halt additional federal funding for abstinence-only-until-marriage programs.

US Kids Having Unsafe Sex: Survey (news article)
American teenagers may be having less sexual intercourse, but that doesn't mean they're abstaining from unsafe sex. A recent survey by Ansell Healthcare, manufacturer of LifeStyles condoms, found that one-third of teenage girls said oral sex is not sex. Twenty percent of teens had oral sex by age 15, half by age 17. In some circles, say health officials, oral sex is almost obligatory, like a goodnight kiss.


BOOKS/BOOK REVIEWS

Reconstructing Gender: A Multicultural Anthology (book)
This anthology on gender focuses on women and men and the multiple identities that comprise the lives of individuals across gender. Drawing from a wide range of sources including research articles, essays, and personal narratives, Disch has chosen accessible, engaging, and provocative readings that represent a plurality of perspectives and experiences.


PROFILES / SPECIAL REPORTS

AIDS, Public Policy, and Child Well-Being (research report)
Download each chapter separately in PDF format. The study, published by UNICEF's Innocenti Research Centre, draws on nine country case studies from Africa and Asia to examine the damage caused by HIV/AIDS to the well-being of children and families and to the smooth functioning of the societies in which they live.

US: Women and Smoking: A Report of the Surgeon General (executive summary)
The present report reviews the now massive body of evidence on women and smoking, evidence that taken together compels the US to make reducing and preventing smoking one of the highest contemporary priorities for women's health.

Population, Poverty Reduction and Sustainable Development (feature article)
The feature provides links to selected Internet resources about population, environment, poverty, and other World Summit on Sustainable Development issues from a population perspective.

Recommendations for Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in Pregnant HIV-1-Infected Women for Maternal Health and Interventions to Reduce Perinatal HIV-1 Transmission in the United States PDF Format (Perinatal Guidelines)
Revisions to the February 4, 2002 Public Health Service Task Force Recommendations for Use of Antiretroviral Drugs in Pregnant Women Infected with HIV-1 for Maternal Health and for Reducing Perinatal HIV-1 Transmission in the United States have been made by the Perinatal HIV Guidelines Working Group.

WHO/CONRAD technical consultation on Nonoxynol-9 : World Health Organization, Geneva, 9-10 October 2001PDF Format (summary report)

HIV/AIDS, Human Resources and Sustainable Development PDF Format
This is a new report released by UNAIDS at the World Summit on Sustainable Development on August 30, 2002, detailing how the epidemic is affecting global human capital and suggests strategies to mitigate its impact.


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