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The Pop Reporter®

Volume 2, Number 50
16 December 2002


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

US Defends Family Planning Policies at Bangkok Conference (news article)
The United States has been defending its aid policy on family planning at an international conference in Bangkok.

Chinese Debate Expulsion of Student Pair (news article)
The expulsions of a pregnant student and her boyfriend from a Chinese university have touched off a rare public debate about sexual morality. The pair was expelled in October after a school doctor found the 19-year-old woman was pregnant. The doctor reported the pregnancy to school officials, who forced the woman, a student of law and economics, to write a confession naming her 21-year-old lover, where and when they met and how many times they had sex.

Donor Dealings: The Impact of International Donor Aid On Sexual and Reproductive Health Services (commentary)
Since the Cairo International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in 1994, international donors to population and AIDS programs have been called on to respond to the ICPD goals for expanded and holistic reproductive health services. How have they met the call? To explore this and other related questions, the author looks first at the changing face of donors to sexual and reproductive health, the nature of their support and the inherent problems associated with their support. She then considers whether and how donors support the Cairo agenda, and discusses the opportunities presented by recent health systems changes.

Traditional Medicine and Reproductive Health in Africa (editorial)
There has been Intense public health debate in many parts of Africa to determine the most appropriate official policy towards traditional medicines for reproductive health care. The author argues that because traditional practitioners work more closely with the grassroots (as compared to orthodox practitioners), traditional practitioners would be more able to advocate for changing behaviours that impact negatively on reproductive health in Africa.

India Announces Plan to Inform HIV Infected Blood Donors (news article)
India's health ministry last week announced that blood donors found to be HIV positive would be told of their infection and asked to seek confirmatory tests and counselling.


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH RESEARCH

10th Report on Carcinogens (report)
Related press release: Estrogens Top New Carcinogens List
The US government today published its biennial Report on Carcinogens, adding steroidal estrogens used in estrogen replacement therapy and oral contraceptives to its official list of "known" human carcinogens. This and 15 other new listings bring the total of substances in the report, "known" or "reasonably anticipated" to pose a cancer risk, to 228.

Reversible Infertility in Male Mice After Oral Administration of Alkylated Imino Sugars: A Nonhormonal Approach to Male Contraception (research abstract)
Related news article: Drug Shows Promise As Male Birth Control Pill
Researchers found that a drug called NB-DNJ, which is used to treat a genetic disorder called Gaucher's disease, made mice temporarily infertile. Mice became infertile after taking the pill for 3 weeks, and they regained their fertility within a month of stopping the drug.

Accessibility and Use of Contraceptives in Vietnam (research article)
The authors of this study examine the Vietnam Demographic and Health Survey and find that nearly 84% of currently married Vietnamese women (100% of those in urban areas and 80% of those in rural areas) lived within one kilometer of at least one source of family planning services in 1997. Community health centers and drugstores were the most readily accessible services for Vietnamese women.

Reconciling Cost Recovery with Health Equity Concerns in a Context of Gender Inequality and Poverty: Findings From a New Family Health Initiative in Bangladesh (research article)
The authors examine client and community reactions to changes in the reproductive health services offered by non-governmental organizations in Bangladesh. The new model offers family planning and basic health services at clinics, and provides contraceptive supplies through village depots rather than doorstep delivery. Caught between an increasing emphasis on cost recovery and a mandate to continue providing basic services to clients who cannot afford to pay, providers need a transparent system for providing credit and fee exemption.

In Search of Seamless Transition to Post-Lactational Amenorrhea Method Contraception (commentary)
Despite the compelling evidence showing that the lactational amenorrhea method works, many family planning providers in the field remain unconvinced. Guidelines for use of the method implicitly assume that once a woman is informed about the lactational amenorrhea method, she will be protected against pregnancy as long as she meets its simple criteria, and that the health care system will operate to allow a smooth transition from lactational amenorrhea to another contraceptive method. Unfortunately, it is overly optimistic to assume that women who wish to continue practicing contraception will make a smooth transition from lactational amenorrhea to another method. To improve the transition from lactational amenorrhea to other contraceptive methods, providers must learn to trust the basic assumption behind the lactational amenorrhea method--if a woman meets all three criteria for lactational amenorrhea, the likelihood of pregnancy is very small.


FAMILY PLANNING / REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH NEWS

UK Campaigners Demand Baby Sex Selection Ban (news article)
A campaign to ban sex selection was launched in Britain on Friday amid claims that clinics are exploiting the traditional preference for boys among the Indian population. The campaigners said sex selection was outlawed in 1994 in India because it was dramatically changing the ratio of girls to boys but the practice remained legal in Britain where clinics were advertising in Punjabi newspapers.

Researchers Examine Protection Potential of Diaphragm (news article)
Activists are calling for more research into the use of diaphragms in developing countries as a woman-controlled means of preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS.

'Harmless Procedure' Used to Sterilize Kurdish Women (news article)
Human rights organizations accuse the Turkish government of forcing Kurdish women to undergo sterilization.

Namibia Starts Condom Factory (news article)
With HIV/AIDS infection rates rising faster in Namibia, the government has set up a condom factory to ensure that there is enough supply of condoms in the country.

Uganda to Build Condom Factory (news article)
Uganda will soon start manufacturing condoms. The decision to manufacture condoms locally is as a result of the proven high consumption in the country. The condoms would be supplied to other countries in the region.

WHO, China Testing Male Birth Control Pill (news article)
The World Health Organization and the government of China are funding a study to test a new contraceptive for men that scientists hope could become the male version of the birth control pill. In the current WHO-Chinese study, 1,000 men from 10 locations are receiving monthly testosterone shots and, once their sperm count drops low enough, having unprotected sex with their partners.


HIV / AIDS RESEARCH

Visualization of the Intracellular Behavior of HIV in Living Cells (research abstract)
Related news article: UIC Scientists Provide First Images Of HIV In Living Cells
In stunning color images using time-lapse microscopy, researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have for the first time captured the very earliest stages of HIV infection in living cells.

Differences in Histoplasmosis in Patients with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome in the United States and Brazil (research abstract)
Demographic and clinical parameters among patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and histoplasmosis in Brazil and United States were compared. Of 21 treated case patients, 4 (19%) died, a rate similar to that of the US case patients (5%-13%). By nuclear gene, the Brazilian isolates were equally divided between South American classes 5 and 6, and RAPD-PCR showed 18 distinct genetic fingerprints in 20 isolates. Skin lesions are more common in infection with class 5 or 6 organisms than with class 2 Histoplasma capsulatum. The role of genetic differences in the organism as a cause for the clinical differences requires investigation.


HIV / AIDS NEWS

New International Coalition Aims to Expand Global Access to HIV/AIDS Treatment (press release)
A group of some 50 non-governmental bodies, international agencies and national governments announced the creation of a new alliance to help poor countries gain access to costly treatments to halt the spread of AIDS.

HIV Trick Helps Explain Failed Vaccine Attempts (news article)
Scientists have discovered a new way HIV evades the body's immune response, helping to explain why it has been so hard to develop a broadly effective AIDS vaccine.

China Urges Safer Sex in Rural Areas and Among Migrant Workers (news article)
Family planning associations throughout China will be asked to do a better job of teaching the rural and migrant population about safe sex to prevent HIV/AIDS.

South Africa: State Softens Stance on AIDS Drugs (news article)
The government's stance on the use of anti-retroviral drugs is increasingly softening, with Deputy President Jacob Zuma saying their use could improve the condition of people living with AIDS. This represents a major shift in the government's position, which had been that anti-retroviral drugs were toxic.

Kenya: Check HIV Spread in Children, Urges Unicef (news article)
United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) has asked the Government to take urgent action to protect children against increasing HIV/Aids infection. And Unicef has expressed concern that over 50 per cent of orphans in Kenya are out of school. Unicef Kenya Officer in charge of Hiv/Aids Unit said four out of every ten children born to HIV positive mothers are infected.


MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH RESEARCH

Self Help Smoking Cessation in Pregnancy: Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial (research article)
A low cost, self help intervention to stop smoking in pregnancy was acceptable to midwives and pregnant women, but was ineffective when implemented during routine antenatal care. A trial randomized midwives either to continue to provide pregnant smokers with normal care or additionally to introduce a series of self help booklets to encourage smoking cessation and prevent relapse. Cessation rates were similar in both trial arms, but substantially lower than the self reported rates on which current smoking policy is based.

National Vital Statistics Reports: Mean Age of Mother, 1970-2000 PDF Format (report)
Related news article: American Women Waiting to Begin Families (press release)
The average American woman was almost 25 years old when she had her first child in the year 2000. That's compared to an average age of 21.4 years for a first birth in 1970, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The report also shows that the average age of mothers for all births rose from 24.6 years to 27.2 over the past three decades.

Inverse Correlation between Memory Gag-Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes and Viral Replication in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Children (research abstract)
A previous study showed that, during the first year of life, the presence of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected children is associated with a lack of rapid progression to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The goal of the study was to address the role of CTLs in children who survived after age 5 years. Results of this study showed the beneficial role of HIV-specific CTLs in children who survived after age 5 years.

Domestic Violence During Pregnancy in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (PubMed abstract)
To estimate the prevalence and risk groups of domestic violence during pregnancy among public health care users in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The study focuses on violence perpetrated by both women and partners. Physical violence mainly occurred among adolescent women with less schooling, who did not work outside the home, with fewer prenatal appointments, and with little social support. Families with more under-five children, alcohol and drug abuse, and low socio-economic status were also involved more frequently. High prevalence rates for various forms of domestic violence in Brazil suggest that the issue should be viewed as a major public health problem.

Infant Feeding and Lactational Amenorrhea in Sagamu, Nigeria (research abstract)
This paper describes the infant feeding practices of women in Sagamu, Nigeria. Compared with similarly selected women in other countries, they regularly fed their infants with supplements from a very early age, yet breastfeeding frequency and duration did not decline dramatically.

Childcare Practices of Commercial Sex Workers (research abstract)
Researchers studied commercial sex workers (CSWs) in Kibera slum, Nairobi, Kenya, to determine their childcare practices. They found that there was more emphasis on the physical rather than psychological aspect of childcare. Health seeking behaviour for the children was hampered by lack of funds and to some extent alcohol consumption by the mothers


MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH NEWS

Western Africa: Truck Drivers Help Pregnant Women (news article)
There are few transport links in many parts of Africa. Villagers in parts of Western Africa have come up with an ingenious way of helping pregnant women get to hospital. They place yellow flags on the side of major roads to literally flag down passing truck drivers.

Stressed Parents Have Smaller Babies (news article)
Babies tend to weigh less and be shorter at birth if their fathers are unemployed or their mothers are stressed out and do not take enough maternity leave, a study by the Chinese University has found.


MEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH

The Relationship Between Environmental Exposures to Phthalates and DNA Damage in Human Sperm Using the Neutral Comet Assay PDF Format(research abstract)
Related news article: Study Links Chemical to Sperm Damage
A chemical used to preserve cosmetics and fragrances may cause damage to sperm in adult men. However, scientists are unsure as to whether this damage could leave men infertile, or cause birth defects.

Air Pollution Induces Heritable DNA Mutations (research abstract)
Related news article: Study Looks at Pollution, Gene Mutations
Exposure to air pollution from steel mills may cause genetic mutations that are passed by fathers to their offspring, according to a study in mice.


MEN'S HEALTH NEWS

Men's Contraceptive Options Slowly Improve (news article)
Endocrinologist William J. Bremner says men might be more likely to take responsibility for birth control if they had more methods from which to choose. Bremner is director of a new male contraception research center at the University of Washington in Seattle, created with $9.5 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health. While women sometimes wonder aloud why there isn't a version of the birth-control pill for men, Bremner thinks the ultimate goal should be to create an array of new male methods to match different needs and preferences.


POPULATION RESEARCH

Revisiting Aspects of Nigeria's Population Policy (research abstract)
This article reviews the current demographic and contraceptive profile of Nigeria and recommends a review of the national population policy.

A Preliminary Assessment of the Quality of the 1998 Malawi Population and Housing Census Data (research abstract)
The preliminary results of the 1998 Malawi Population and Housing Census (MPHC) indicated that the population of Malawi was 9.8 million. But this figure is less than estimates prepared by most national and international institutions, which estimated the population of Malawi in 1998 at around 11 million. This paper argues that the population figure obtained from the 1998 census, like most other censuses in developing countries, were underreported. Consequences of this overestimate include a false sense of success for the national family planning program and a distorted Gross Domestic Product per capita, suggesting a general improvement in the quality of life contrary to the situation.


POPULATION NEWS

150-year low for births and weddings (news article)
Birth and marriage rates in South Australia have fallen to the lowest level in 150 years, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Nigeria: Nwosu Advocates Increased Campaign Against Population Growth (news article)
Nigeria's Minister of Health has called for increased campaign aimed at creating enough awareness on the problems associated with population explosion in the country.

Ukraine's Population on the Decrease (news article)
During ten months of the current year, Ukraine's population decreased 293,850.

Uganda: Control Population Growth - Sendaula (news article)
Hardly a fortnight after two East African Presidents advocated for bigger populations, finance minister Gerald Sendaula has emphatically called on Ugandans to have as few children as possible.

UK: Birth rate at all-time low (news article)
The birth rate in England and Wales has fallen to an all-time low. The average number of children per woman is just 1.64 - the lowest since records began in 1924.

Population Loss in South Africa, Botswana (news article)
South Africa and Botswana are among the seven countries facing the largest population losses between now and 2050, according to the 2002 World Population Data Sheet.


WOMEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH

Use of Alternative and Complementary Medicine in Menopause (PubMed abstract)
The purpose of this study was to review the clinical evidence available for the treatment of menopausal symptoms with alternative and complementary medicine. The Medline, PreMedline and Cochrane electronic databases for the years 1980-2002 were searched for articles concerning soy products, black cohosh, dong quai, acupuncture, ginseng and evening primrose oil. Results showed that soy isoflavones slightly decrease total cholesterol and LDL levels. The clinical significance of this small change is yet to be determined. The synthetic isoflavone derivative ipriflavone increases bone mineral density in healthy peri- and postmenopausal women with moderate bone mineral densities. Alternative and complementary medicine may play a role in the management of menopause, however, well-designed large studies are still needed.


WOMEN'S HEALTH NEWS

New 3-D Mammography System May Improve Breast Imaging (news article)
A new approach to mammography, developed by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, holds the potential for greatly improving the detection of breast lesions and the ability to predict whether they are benign or malignant. Among the new technique's advantages, called digital tomosynthesis, is a significant reduction in false positive test results.

Women Confused About HRT (news article)
A new national poll reveals that women are confused about hormone replacement therapy, perhaps not surprising in the wake of several recent studies on the subject.

Family Breast Cancer History Won't Up Uterine Risk (news article)
Breast cancer and endometrial cancer share several risk factors, but women with a family history of breast cancer do not have an increased risk of endometrial cancer.

Kenya: FGM Continues Despite Seminars (news article)
Female genital mutilation (FGM) in Nyamira District continues despite seminars organised against it.


YOUTH RESEARCH

Young Women's Accounts of Factors Influencing Their Use and Non-use of Emergency Contraception: In-depth Interview Study (research article)
Several factors influence whether young women choose to use emergency contraception. In-depth interviews of 30 women aged 16-25 were carried out. Those women who expressed the strongest desire to avoid pregnancy used emergency contraception if necessary. Women who did not use emergency contraception felt less vulnerable to pregnancy, had negative associations with emergency contraception and the people who used it, or found it difficult to seek or ask for emergency contraception.

Effect of a Clinical Practice Improvement Intervention on Chlamydial Screening Among Adolescent Girls (research abstract)
Although annual C. trachomatis screening of sexually active adolescent girls is recommended by health professional organizations the goal is not being met. The authors therefore set out to test the effectiveness of a system-level, clinical practice improvement intervention designed to increase C. trachomatis screening by using urine-based tests for sexually active adolescent girls identified during their routine checkups at a pediatric clinic. Results indicated that implementation of this clinical practice intervention in a large health maintenance organization system was feasible, and it significantly increased the C. trachomatis screening rates for sexually active adolescent girls during routine checkups.

Reproductive Choices for Asian Adolescents: A Focus on Contraceptive Behavior (research article)
Societal pressures and a lack of access to appropriate information and services discourage contraceptive use among married adolescents in South and Southeast Asia, according to this new study. Because early, frequent childbearing can endanger the health of young women and their children, the authors argue that more attention must be paid to adolescents' needs for accurate information about contraceptives and for user-friendly services. The analysis uses national survey data from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam to examine adolescents' contraceptive behavior.

Prevalence of Gonococcal and Chlamydial Infections and Sexual Risk Behavior Among Youth in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (PubMed abstract)
No community-based study on the magnitude of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) has ever been conducted among young people in Ethiopia. The goal of this study was to assess the magnitude of and infections and status of sexual risk behavior among youths (15-24 years old) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Report of sexual activity was significantly associated with being male, an age of >/=20 years, out-of-school status, and report of alcohol/khat (amphetamine-like substance) consumption. Females reported less condom use, whether they were in or out of school and independent of age. Authors concluded that out-of-school youths, especially females, took more sexual risk and were exceedingly susceptible to STDs. This calls for alternative group-targeted strategies for sex education, disease prevention, and STD screening and management.

Adolescent Fertility and Reproductive Health in Four sub-Saharan African Countries (research abstract)
The authors of this paper used Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data for Ghana (1998), Kenya (1998), Tanzania (1996) and Zambia (1996) to examine adolescent fertility and reproductive health. They found adolescent fertility highest in Zambia and lowest in Ghana. At age 19 years, the percentages of adolescent females who have started childbearing were 61 in Tanzania, 59 in Zambia, 45 in Kenya and 32 in Ghana. The proportions of adolescent females who correctly mentioned that a woman is most likely to conceive in the middle of the ovulatory cycle were 6.9% in Tanzania, 7.4% in Zambia and 13.4% in Kenya. The authors recommend that the knowledge base in reproductive physiology of in and out-of-school adolescents should be strengthened.


YOUTH NEWS

Zambia: Youth Empowered to Prevent HIV/AIDS (news article)
With about half of all new adult HIV/AIDS infections taking place among young people, a recently launched UNICEF project is empowering the youth to become a part of the solution to reverse this trend.

Singapore to Use Shock Tactics to Steer Teens Away from Sex (news article)
Singpaore teens are to be bombarded with horror pictures showing body parts disfigured by sexually-transmitted diseases in a government attempt to quell a growing cavalier attitude to casual sex.

Violence in Youth Ups Risk of Violence in Dating (news article)
Children who experience sibling violence--either physical or psychological--are more likely to enter into dating relationships filled with violence, as well, new study findings report.

Britain Making Progress in Tackling Teen Pregnancy (news article)
Britain's efforts to reduce its teen pregnancy rate are paying off, but the goal of halving numbers by the end of the decade is still a long way from being realized. With nearly 39,000 girls under 18 conceiving each year, Britain has the highest teenage pregnancy rate in Western Europe. In recent years the government established a program that aims to reduce 1998 levels 50% by 2010.

Kenya: Check HIV Spread in Children, Urges UNICEF (news article)
UNICEF has asked the government to take urgent action to protect children against increasing HIV/AIDS infection. The organization has also expressed concern that more than 50 per cent of orphans in Kenya are out of school.


PROFILES / SPECIAL REPORTS

See No Evil: How Internet Filters Affect the Search for Online Health Information PDF Format (executive summary)
Related news article: Study: Web Filters Block Health Information
Software meant to protect young people from the seamier side of the Internet may also be blocking important health information on issues ranging from diabetes and sexually transmitted diseases to depression and suicide, according to a Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation study.

The State of the World's Children 2003 (report)
Related press release: Why Children Must Be Heard
Asserting that tens of millions of children around the world feel disconnected from political institutions and lack trust in their governments, UNICEF said that children must be given more of a voice and more ways to participate in decisions affecting their lives.


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