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Complications of Pregnancy

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  • Take aim at lowering cervical cancer rates

    A study of cervical cancer incidence and mortality in North Carolina has revealed areas where rates are unusually high, prompting public health officials to call for education, screening, and vaccination programs in impacted areas.
  • Female condom effective in fight against HIV

    According to a new economic analysis of the DC Female Condom program, a public-private partnership to provide and promote FC2 Female Condoms (Female Health Co., Chicago), the program prevented enough HIV infections in the first year alone to save more than $8 million in future medical care costs over and above the cost of the program.
  • Guidance issued on cervical cancer screening: Update your practice now

    Get ready to add two sets of guidance on cervical cancer screening to your practice database: the most current recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) and joint cervical cancer prevention guidelines issued by the American Cancer Society, American Society for Colposcopy and Cervical Pathology, and American Society for Clinical Pathology (ACS/ASCCP/ASCP).
  • Too few young women get tested for chlamydia

    How many chlamydia tests were performed on sexually active women ages 15-25 in your clinic last year? If your numbers are similar to a new national analysis, about 38% of sexually active young women ages 15-25 were screened for the sexually transmitted disease (STD).
  • Add treatment option for heavy menstrual bleeding

    About three million U.S. women experience heavy menstrual bleeding each year.1 With the recent Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of Natazia (Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Wayne, NJ) for treatment in women who choose an oral contraceptive (OC), clinicians now have another therapeutic option.
  • Ulipristal acetate: New fibroid treatment?

    Ulipristal acetate, the drug recently approved as an emergency contraceptive in the United States (Ella, Watson Pharmaceuticals, Morristown, NJ), is being eyed for other gynecologic uses. In research looking at women with symptomatic fibroids who were planning to undergo surgery, treatment with the selective progesterone-receptor modulator was effective in controlling excessive bleeding and reducing fibroid size at 13 weeks.
  • Study confirms impact of OCs on dysmenorrhea

    Results from a large, long-running Scandinavian study provides convincing evidence that combined oral contraceptives (OCs) alleviate the symptoms of dysmenorrhea, painful menstrual periods.
  • HPV shot doesn't trigger autoimmune response

    New research indicates that the human papillomavirus vaccine (HPV) Gardasil (Merck & Co.) does not trigger autoimmune conditions such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 diabetes, or multiple sclerosis after vaccination in young women.
  • Pfizer issues recalls for Akrimax OCs

    Has your clinic telephone been ringing recently with calls from women who have heard about a birth control pill recall? Chances are, few, if any, of your patients were using the affected oral contraceptives (OCs).
  • The 'Get It and Forget It' methods are here: Remove obstacles to use

    Where do long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARC) fit in at your facility? How are you encouraging women to use the "Get It and Forget It" methods? If you are seeing low numbers of women choosing intrauterine devices (IUDs) or the contraceptive implant, you might want to change your counseling strategy.