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  • Fully Funded Access to Contraception Can Change an Entire Population’s Lives

    The results of Colorado’s contraception expansion experiment are in, showing a dramatic improvement in women’s lives during the period in which Title X programs were fully funded through a grant. The Colorado Family Planning Initiative profoundly affected adolescent girls and young adults, resulting in a 6% to 12% increase in women obtaining their college degrees compared to earlier cohorts that did not benefit from the expanded contraception program, according to study results.

  • Probiotics and Iron Intake in Pregnancy

    In a randomized controlled trial, a significantly smaller decrease in serum ferritin was observed in pregnant women with the intake of a Lactiplantibacillus plantarum 299v supplement containing a low dose of iron, folic acid, and ascorbic acid than in the placebo group.

  • Provider Perceptions of Neonatal Survival for Fetuses Born at 22 Weeks of Gestation

    Prognostic differences exist among neonatal and obstetric care providers when neonates are delivered at 22 weeks of gestation. However, there are no statistically significant differences in the gestational age at which providers recommend active treatment or antenatal corticosteroids.

  • New Treatments for Uterine Fibroids

    In this prospective, open-label, single-arm trial of 149 individuals with heavy menstrual bleeding and uterine leiomyomas, daily relugolix combination therapy (relugolix 40 mg, estradiol 1 mg, and norethindrone acetate 0.5 mg) resulted in a mean menstrual blood loss reduction of 90%, and 70% of the participants achieved amenorrhea by the end of the 52-week period. Similar results were found for other arms of the trial among women who crossed over from placebo and relugolix-only therapy to relugolix combination therapy.

  • #IUD on TikTok: An Analysis of Intrauterine Device-Related Content on Social Media

    The top 100 videos on the social media platform TikTok were compiled and systematically analyzed for user demographics and video content. More videos had a negative tone, particularly those conveying patient experiences related to pain and informed consent.

  • Clinicians Are Ethically Obligated to Consider Financial Side of Care

    Clinicians should include the cost of care in discussions, help patients access charity care or financial counseling, and screen patients for social determinants of health.

  • Effectively Intervening with Patients Facing Housing Instability

    The notion that housing is healthcare stems from a growing body of research that links housing instability with higher rates of morbidity and mortality. There is a moral and humanitarian case for healthcare organizations to engage on the housing issue, but there also is a business case. But precisely how healthcare organizations should go about this work is not yet well established. Thus, IHI has partnered with Community Solutions, a nonprofit organization that is working to end homelessness, to examine how healthcare can play an effective role in addressing the problem.

  • Better Care Communication Needed for Home Health

    Researchers wanted to know if there is an association between home health and gaps in care coordination among providers. They found patients receiving home healthcare are sicker, experienced more functional dependencies, and reported more preventable drug-drug interactions. While home health was not associated with a difference in gaps of care coordination, it was associated with twice the risk of a preventable adverse outcome.

  • Integrated Care Teams Should Include Social Workers

    Integrated care teams sometimes lack a social worker, which can undermine the team’s work and success. It is a shortsighted tactic because social workers can help with case management and care coordination in a variety of ways, including intake assessment and behavioral interventions, according to recent research.

  • Study Reveals Positive Benefits of COPD Transition Bundle

    A study of a care transition bundle that included a care coordinator revealed COPD patients in the bundle cohort were less likely to be readmitted to the hospital within seven days and 30 days, but 90-day readmissions were unchanged.