Women have been controlling their fertility for thousands of years, but none were tried and true until "the pill" came along in the 1960s. Dr. Kirtly Parker Jones speaks with OBGYN physician Dr.
In a recent study in Frontiers in Global Women's Health, researchers investigated prospective end-user preferences for an on-demand, non-hormonal female contraception that is presently under ...
DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Female Contraception - Pipeline Review, H2 2016" report to their offering. Contraception (birth control) prevents ...
The use of long-act ing revers ible con tra cep tive (LARC) meth ods—intrauter ine devices (IUDs) and implants—has recently expanded rap idly in the United States, and these meth ods together approach ...
The use of modern family planning methods among married women in Rwanda has risen gradually over the past three decades, from 13 percent in 1992 to 64 percent in 2025, according to the Rwanda ...
Women who used combined contraceptive pills were at greater risk of developing depression than women who did not, according to a new study from Uppsala University. Contraceptive pills increased ...
Mckenzie Trahan, the young homeless woman whose struggle to raise her newborn was chronicled in a series of stories in the Los Angeles Times, had nothing but determination going for her when she got ...