International journal of gynaecology and obstetrics : the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics
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Int J Gynaecol Obstet · Sep 2006
Abortion, social inequity, and women's health: obstetrician-gynecologists as agents of change.
Unsafe abortion persists as a serious health problem for women. It is rooted in poverty, social inequity, and denial of women's basic human rights. As experience from Latin America and other regions demonstrates, obstetrician-gynecologists can be leaders in supporting reproductive rights and access to safe abortion, through their professional societies and also by way of their roles as providers, academicians, and advocates. Ob-gyns are often most effective when working in partnership with women's organizations, lawyers, and other stakeholders.
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Int J Gynaecol Obstet · Sep 2006
Legal issues impacting women's access to care in the United States-the malpractice insurance crisis.
Professional liability insurance costs have increased rapidly in the last 10 years in the United States, while availability of companies offering professional liability insurance has decreased. The result is that ob-gyn physicians are changing their practice patterns. Many are no longer performing difficult or complex surgical procedures while others have stopped caring for obstetrical patients. ⋯ Even where ob-gyns are available, hospitals and insurance carriers are limiting their ability to practice the wide range of procedures for which they were trained. Although legislative efforts to correct the problems are proposed, very few have been enacted. The end result is that women's health care has been threatened and will continue to face shortages and restrictions.
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Int J Gynaecol Obstet · Sep 2006
Cost-effective approaches to in vitro fertilization: means to improve access.
Many childless couples would like to have access to in vitro fertilization (IVF) through public-sector programs, but such programs are scant because of the high costs that IVF entails today. A solution for health departments worldwide might be to leave IVF methods requiring expensive equipment and ovarian stimulating hormones - such as human recombinant gonadotropins, plus gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues to prevent a surge of luteinizing hormone - to the private sector. ⋯ Before embryo transfer, oocyte maturation could occur in vitro or in a makeshift incubator: a tube closed, wrapped, and left in the woman's vagina for 24 h. To prevent short- and long-term costs as well as possible lifelong problems, the transfer of multiple embryos should not be performed.
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Int J Gynaecol Obstet · Sep 2006
EditorialWomen's right to health and the Millennium Development Goals: promoting partnerships to improve access.
The Millennium Development Goals (MGD) represent a commitment of 189 member states that adopted them during the Millennium Summit in September 2000. This UN General Assembly recognized that gender equality and women's empowerment are both central to achieving sustainable development by means of combating poverty, hunger and disease. ⋯ However, a clear link exists between all of the MDGs and the reproductive and sexual health of women, who cannot contribute to sustainable development, unless their right to health is met through improved access. The FIGO 2006 World Report on Women's Health addresses many issues critical to the success of the MDGs, with a focus on how partnerships have become a crucial vehicle to improve access to health for women.