Archive for December 30, 2011

Campaigns To Minimize Unintended Pregnancies, Abortions Ought to Include Messages About Dangers Of Alcohol, Drug Abuse, Letter To Editor Says

Healthcare Prof:

Campaigns that aim to reduce the number of abortions by reducing unintended pregnancies must include “sending children a clear message about the dangers of alcohol and drug abuse,” Joseph Califano — chair and president with the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University — writes in a New York Times letter to the editor in response to a May 19 Times opinion piece by Atul Gawande — a physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and staff writer for the New Yorker (Califano, New York Times, 5/25).

According to Gawande, reducing unintended pregnancies “requires getting specific about two subjects that are perilous in politics: sex and contraception.” He added that people need to know that “close” relationships between parents and their teenage children can reduce unintended pregnancies; that abortion “is mainly an adult problem”; that adults are often “not using contraception properly”; and that self-education on the issue is important (Kaiser Every day Women’s Well being Policy Report, 5/22).

Califano writes that although “Gawande rightly notes that parental engagement is key to reducing unintended pregnancy,” he “doesn’t mention a significant contributor to abortion: alcohol and drug abuse.” Based on Califano, “young teenagers or those in the 18-to-25 age group” — the population “in which abortions are concentrated” — who are “high on alcohol or other drugs like marijuana are likelier to have risky sex.” He adds, “Most unplanned teenage pregnancy occurs when one or each parties are high at the time of conception.” Califano concludes that campaigns that aim to reduce unintended pregnancies must include a “clear message” about the risks associated with alcohol consumption, drug use and unintended pregnancy (New York Times, 5/25).

“Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You are able to view the entire Kaiser Every day Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Every day Wellness Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a totally free service with the Henry J. Kaiser Loved ones Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.

Statehealthfacts.org Adds Updated Details On Women’s Well being

Healthcare Prof:

New data on women’s well being, Statehealthfacts.org: Statehealthfacts.org recently posted new and updated data on women’s health, such as preventive wellness, women’s wellness status, abortion statistics, eating disorder and depression parity and breast-feeding rates (Kaiser Family members Foundation release, 5/24).

“Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the whole Kaiser Everyday Wellness Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Wellness Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a cost-free service of the Henry J. Kaiser Family members Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.

Twtter

Twtter is the biggest all in one Twitter application directory. People here can subscribe to whole lots of apps and get benefits- of all the applications free of cost. Twitter is not just a place where you Tweet, it is more than that where people can share and help each other out. So, twtter has been making application that makes user ease their twitter.

Well for a marketer, a twitter multi account manager is a great application indeed. You can access to multiple accounts once you approve for a particular twitter account. You just need one time login and one time approval for an account. You can have lots of benefits such as Easy tweet, multi RSS subscription, mass following and more.

Mexico Supreme Court Accepts Petition To Review Mexico City Law Legalizing Abortion For the duration of First Three Months’ Gestation

Healthcare Prof:

5 (1 votes)

Article Opinions:1 posts
The Mexico Supreme Court on Friday announced that it has accepted a petition, filed by the National Human Right’s Commission, to review the constitutionality of a Mexico City law that allows pregnant women to obtain an abortion during the very first three months’ gestation, the Los Angeles Times reports (Tobar, Los Angeles Times, 5/29).

Lawmakers from the Party with the Democratic Revolution in March in the Mexico City Legislature proposed allowing abortions during the very first three months of pregnancy in the city, and lawmakers approved the measure in April. City Health Secretary Manuel Mondragon stated the law requires that females seeking abortions prove they are residents with the city except in cases of medical emergency. He also stated that each facility would be able to perform about seven abortions day-to-day. Girls younger than age 18 will need parental consent to obtain an abortion. The law allows gynecologists who have moral objections to refrain from performing abortions (Kaiser Day-to-day Women’s Wellness Policy Report, 4/27).

NHRC, along with the attorney general’s office, on Friday filed the petition, saying that the law violates a constitutional clause guaranteeing the right to life and that city legislators don’t have the authority to approve measures related to health, the AP/International Herald Tribune reports (Grillo, AP/International Herald Tribune, 5/28). The court has not scheduled a date to hear the case, according to the Times. The votes of eight of the court’s 11 justices are required to overturn a law (Los Angeles Times, 5/29). The Democratic Revolutionary Party called on supporters with the law to block federal government offices later this week, the AP/Herald Tribune reports. “It’s a political maneuver to satisfy a certain public opinion over this law,” Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard stated, adding, “But legally, it’s got no base” (AP/International Herald Tribune, 5/28). Meanwhile, opponents with the law have said they will protest in front of city hospitals and encourage physicians to be “conscientious objectors,” who will not perform abortions, the Times reports.

700 Girls Request Abortions After Passage of Law
About 700 women have requested abortions at city public hospitals given that legislators passed the law, and hundreds more women have received abortions at private clinics, government officials and abortion-rights groups said recently, the Times reports. As of Wednesday, Mexico City physicians had performed 215 abortions, and 292 women had appointments for the procedure, officials said. The remaining women are awaiting appointments, and 6% with the requests were made by minors, according to officials. “There has not been a huge demand, like many people supposed,” Mondragon told city legislators at a hearing last week, adding that abortion opponents “thought that once abortion was legalized, everyone would get one. That hasn’t been the case” (Los Angeles Times, 5/29).

“Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You’ll be able to view the whole Kaiser Everyday Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of the Henry J. Kaiser Loved ones Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Loved ones Foundation. All rights reserved.

Newspapers Publish Abortion-Related Letters To Editor

four (1 votes)

Healthcare Prof:

The New York Times and Washington Post recently published letters towards the editor on topics related to abortion. Summaries appear below.

  • Dena Davis, New York Times: Some “pro-life strategists” have “highjacked and misused” the “important concept” of informed consent, Davis, a professor at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, writes in a letter to the editor in response to a current Times post. The purpose of informed consent is to offer ladies the “best medical facts” about their conditions so they can use those facts to “make the best choice for her,” Davis writes. If there is “good evidence that a significant number of women suffer emotional distress after abortion, that is important information females really should know,” Davis writes, adding that they also really should be informed of the “physical risks of carrying a pregnancy to term, the proportion of ladies who suffer postpartum depression and the emotional consequences of giving a baby up for adoption” (Davis, New York Times, 5/28).

  • Nada Stotland, New York Times: The recent Times article reveals some antiabortion advocates’ “claim that by pushing for mandatory counseling about abortion’s alleged psychological and physical risks, they’re working in the interest of females,” Stotland, president-elect with the American Psychiatric Association, writes in a Times letter towards the editor. Based on Stotland, “meticulous” research shows that there is “no causal relationship” between abortion and mental illness. Women’s mental wellness is “jeopardized” when laws mandate doctors to “mislead” females, Stotland writes. She adds, “Doctors take an oath to work in the best interest of patients,” concluding that antiabortion-rights groups “merely claim that mantle as their tactic du jour” (Stotland, New York Times, 5/28).

  • Vicki Saporta, Washington Post: A woman’s decision to obtain an abortion and the health care professionals who provide the procedure had been “unnecessarily stigmatized” in a recent Post article about selective reduction, Saporta, president and CEO of the National Abortion Federation, writes in a Post letter to the editor. Ladies choose to undergo abortion for “many reasons, and selective reduction is one of them,” Saporta writes. According to the Guttmacher Institute, six out of every 10 ladies who have abortions already have children, and more than 50% say they want a child or another child at a later time, Saporta writes. She adds, “Just like the females … who choose selective reduction, many ladies who obtain an abortion feel they’re choosing the most responsible course of action by waiting until they’re able to adequately care for a child” (Saporta, Washington Post, 5/29).

    “Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You are able to view the entire Kaiser Every day Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free of charge service of the Henry J. Kaiser Loved ones Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Household Foundation. All rights reserved.

  • Court Case More than Frozen Embryos In Texas Could Have Implications For Roe V. Wade, Los Angeles Times Reports

    3.five (2 votes)

    Healthcare Prof:

    A case just before the Texas Supreme Court over what must happen with three frozen embryos could have implications for Roe v. Wade — the 1973 Supreme Court case that effectively barred state abortion bans — the Los Angeles Times reports. The embryos had been created by a Texas couple who divorced ahead of the woman underwent in vitro fertilization. Based on the Times, several hours just before Augusta Roman was scheduled to undergo IVF, her husband at the time, Randy Roman, insisted that the procedure be canceled and that the embryos be frozen. The couple later began divorce proceedings. In the case, Augusta Roman is seeking to have the three embryos that survived the freezing process implanted, and Randy Roman is seeking to have them destroyed or to remain frozen indefinitely.

    According to the Times, state courts have decided embryo cases on an individual basis due to the fact there is no federal precedent. The supreme courts of six states in similar cases generally ruled that the right of one divorcing spouse to not implant the embryos overrules the right with the other spouse to have them implanted. The Romans’ attorneys believe that the case, if appealed towards the Supreme Court, could undermine Roe. Some socially conservative legal theorists, who are “buoyed” by the Supreme Court’s current decision to uphold a ban on so-called “partial-birth” abortion, “believe a case involving frozen embryos could give an increasingly conservative court one vehicle for reconsidering” whether embryos have a right to life that is separate from a woman’s right to choose abortion. The Texas Supreme Court is not expected to decide whether to hear the case until late this year, and a federal appeal could take several more years, the Times reports (Sack, Los Angeles Times, 5/30).

    “Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You are able to view the whole Kaiser Every day Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Every day Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free of charge service with the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Loved ones Foundation. All rights reserved.

    Actions Taken On Abortion-Related Legislation In Georgia, Louisiana, Oklahoma

    five (1 votes)

    Healthcare Prof:

    The following highlights recent news of state actions on abortion-related legislation.

  • Georgia: Gov. Sonny Perdue (R) on Wednesday signed into law an amended version of a bill (HB 147) that requires females seeking abortions to be offered the option of viewing an ultrasound or sonogram image with the fetus, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports (Campos, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 5/24). The bill states that the requirement helps shield “unborn children from a woman’s uninformed choice to have an abortion.” Different versions of the measure passed the House and Senate, and a six-member panel appointed to reach compromise legislation added requirements, such as that females have the option of listening to the heartbeat of the fetus. In addition, girls will be needed to sign a document stating whether they had agreed to see the image with the fetus. The Georgia Legislature approved the compromised legislation in April (Kaiser Everyday Women’s Health Policy Report, 4/24). The law goes into effect on July 1 (Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 5/24).

  • Louisiana: The House on Thursday unanimously voted to approve a measure (HB 614) that would ban so-called “partial-birth” abortion in the state, the AP/Shreveport Times reports. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Gary Beard (R), says that doctors who provide the procedure could receive fines between $1,000 and $10,000 and jail sentences between one and 10 years. The ban would allow exceptions when the life of the pregnant woman is in danger. The bill now moves towards the Senate. Sen. Ben Nevers (D) is sponsoring a similar bill (SB 161) that is awaiting debate by the Senate wellness committee (Simpson, AP/Shreveport Times, 5/24).

  • Oklahoma: A measure that bans the use of state or federal funds to perform abortions has become law after a deadline passed for it to be vetoed by Gov. Brad Henry (D), Reuters reports (Reuters, 5/24). Henry last month vetoed a similar bill (SB 714) that would have banned the use of state or federal funds to perform abortions except to save the lives of pregnant women. The vetoed legislation also would have barred using state-supported hospitals, clinics and equipment to perform abortions. In addition, the bill would have tightened the bypass provision of the state’s informed consent law by changing the definition of “medical emergency” and would have made all state employees ineligible to perform an abortion except to save the life with the woman. The Senate failed to override the veto by one vote. However, the Senate and House earlier this month approved a new bill that allows physicians more rights to discuss the procedure with the pregnant woman. Public hospitals still will be allowed to perform abortions in cases of rape, incest or to save the life of pregnant females, according to supporters with the new law (Kaiser Everyday Women’s Health Policy Report, 5/23).

    “Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the whole Kaiser Everyday Well being Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Well being Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free of charge service with the Henry J. Kaiser Loved ones Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Loved ones Foundation. All rights reserved.

  • An ecstatic place for adults

    Do you think sometimes life is very boring and you want to find something excited to do? Do you have the right attitude and perception of sex? If your answers are yes and yes, then come to visit the http://pornxchange.com/, which is similar to pornXchange, Porn Xchange, Porn X change or pornxchange.com, etc. It is a very popular and well-known website, which provides 100% free porn movies among the adults and you could also do some porn tube reviews here. But one thing I should remind you is that this website only open to the people who are over the eighteen years old.

    According to “The Friends of Health”, a very famous journal about life and health, watching some porn movies would improve the quality of your sexy life, which is one of the main factors that could determine whether your marriage is happy and successful or not. What’s more, it also refers to that making love is good for our body and has several benefits. For example, sex could destroy pressures and relieve tensions. That is due to the fact that during the process of sex, the release of hormones can be maintained for several hours or one day, making us feel comfortable and destroying pressures. And sex also could keep you youth. If you do not use your genitals, then it will tend to degenerate. What’s more, sex life can increase vaginal lubrication and vaginal moisture

    Actually everyone knows the significance of the harmonious sexy life and they also try their best to make it better, however, unluckily a certain people have several problems and someone might know so little knowledge about making love. Experts advise you to take advantage of some assistant tools, such as porn movies. That is because you might learn some sex techniques from these videos and these things, offering you some new and interesting ideas, also could add some more pleasures to your daily life.

     

    Mozambican Government Considers Legalizing Abortion To Decrease Abortion-Related Maternal Deaths

    five (four votes)

    Healthcare Prof:

    4.five (2 votes)

    Officials in the Mozambican government are considering legalizing abortion in an effort to reduce maternal deaths resulting from illegal, unsafe abortions, IRIN News reports. In accordance with the Ministry of Well being, unsafe abortion may be the third-leading cause of death among pregnant women in the country, which has one of the highest maternal death rates worldwide. More than 40% of serious pregnancy complications treated at the central hospital in Maputo, Mozambique’s capital, are the result of illegal abortions, and unsafe abortions accounted for 11% of maternal deaths at the hospital during the 1990s.

    Abortion is banned in the country except if the life or well being of the pregnant woman is in danger. Physicians in some urban areas during Mozambique’s civil war routinely performed abortions if the pregnancy was the result of rape. Some urban physicians still perform the procedure in cases of rape; however, the $25 fee is too high for most Mozambicans. In accordance with IRIN News, if the ban is lifted, safe abortions would be more widely available to low-income women and foreign donors would be able to fund the procedure.

    “Changing the law and removing the stigma and taboo that surround abortion also allows ladies to openly seek and receive safe services and for their communities to offer the support they need for this,” Eunice Brookman-Amissah, vice president for the reproductive rights group Ipas in Africa, said. Based on Ipas, abortion-related deaths decreased by 91% in South Africa after it lifted restrictions on abortion 10 years ago.

    There has been little public debate in Mozambique on whether to change the law, IRIN News reports. Catholic leaders in the country recently distributed a pastoral note that stated although the Roman Catholic Church wants to reduce maternal deaths and promote women’s rights, abortion “is not the solution.” Based on the World Health Organization, 68,000 women worldwide die from unsafe abortions annually (IRIN News, 5/29).

    “Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You’ll be able to view the whole Kaiser Everyday Well being Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Everyday Wellness Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of the Henry J. Kaiser Household Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Household Foundation. All rights reserved.

    About 1.2M Brazilian Women Hospitalized In Last 5 Years For Illegal Abortion-Related Complications, Report Says

    four (1 votes)

    Healthcare Prof:

    About 1.2 million girls in Brazil have been hospitalized in the last five years with infections, vaginal bleeding as well as other complications resulting from illegal abortions, based on a report released on Wednesday by the International Planned Parenthood Federation, Reuters reports.

    The report, based on data from Brazil’s Ministry of Well being, found that about one million abortions are conducted in the country annually, such as illegal abortions and miscarriages. About 230,000 women seek treatment from the country’s well being system annually for abortion-related complications, which includes hemorrhaging and perforation with the vaginal wall and uterus. The report also found that about five girls die from complications that arise from unsafe procedures for every 100,000 live births.

    Maria Jose Araujo, a member with the panel of well being experts that presented the report, stated the number of illegal abortions among young ladies is increasing. Based on the report, about 3,000 girls ages 10 to 14 had been hospitalized for complications resulting from abortions in 2005 and more than 46,000 girls ages 15 to 19 sought treatment. Araujo added that black, indigenous and lower-income ladies disproportionately seek abortions in Brazil.

    “Legal prohibition does not eliminate the practice of abortion, everybody knows this,” Carmen Barroso, director of IPPF’s Western Hemisphere Region, said, adding that IPPF is in favor of developing a program to offer pregnant girls information and counseling even if abortion remains illegal in the country.

    Brazilian Health Minister Jose Gomes Temporao on Monday at a ceremony for a new family planning program renewed his promise to initiate a debate on abortion. “The government will get the issue rolling so girls can decide,” Temporao said (Welsh, Reuters, 5/30).

    “Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. It is possible to view the entire Kaiser Day-to-day Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service with the Henry J. Kaiser Household Foundation . ? 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.