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Just-released information from the National Survey of Family Growth offers family planning clinicians a mix of good and bad news: While sexually active teens are more likely to be using contraception, many teens are uninformed about birth control choices.
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If it were easier for women to obtain emergency contraception (EC), would it result in an increase in unprotected intercourse, cause women to forego their current method of contraception, or increase the risk of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs)? Apparently not, according to the findings of a just-published study.
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How many women do you see in your practice who say they have chronic or recurrent headaches? If the numbers are high, dont be surprised: Headaches are a frequent occurrence in women of reproductive age. But what is your approach in determining whether these women may use combined oral contraceptives (OCs)?
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What are some of your questions when it comes to hormonal contraceptive use? Two readers questions are tackled below by Leon Speroff, MD, associate director of the Womens Health Research Unit at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, and David Archer, MD, professor of obstetrics and gynecology and director of the Clinical Research Center at the Eastern Virginia Medical Center in Norfolk.
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Make plans now to attend the annual meeting of the Washington, DC-based American College of Nurse-Midwives. Scheduled for June 10-16 in Washington, DC, the event, With Women Through Time, will commemorate the organizations 50th anniversary.
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An outbreak of a type of Chlamydia trachomatis, lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV) has occurred in the Netherlands and other European countries, which has led infectious disease officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to ask U.S. clinicians to look out for LGV cases.
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Discontinuation of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may increase the risk of first acute myocardial infarction in the near term.
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Rectal bleeding is quite common in patients younger than 50 years of age, but evaluation by total colonoscopy has often been reserved for older patients since serious lower GI lesions are thought to be unusual in younger individuals.
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A long-term prospective study of 148,610 adults aged 50 to 74 years showed an increased risk of colon cancer with prolonged high consumption of red meat and processed meat.