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61. Skills For Health Competence Database
a) promoting their health and wellbeing for pregnancy K39 the range of specialist pre-conception care and infertility services available locally and
http://www.skillsforhealth.org.uk/viewcomp.php?id=3255

62. Hormonal, Dumpy, And Not Pregnant - Fertilitext Discussion Board
I just went for my first appoitment with an RE (fertility spec.) today. Alternative Pregnancies General issues, Alternative Therapies, Adoption
http://www.fertilitext.org/ubb/Forum22/HTML/000209.html
Fertilitext Discussion Board
Therapies

Hormonal, dumpy, and not pregnant
profile
register preferences faq ... next oldest topic Author Topic: Hormonal, dumpy, and not pregnant KathyN
Junior Member Posts: 6
Registered: Oct 2001 posted October 19, 2001 06:30 PM I'm 31, have been diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrom and have been on Clomid for five months with no luck. I am frustrated (as I sure we all are) with the weight that I have put on (15-20 lbs) since beginning the therapy as well as each month "failing" at getting pregnant. I feel as though I loose my mind for about 1 1/2 to 2 weeks during the month and when I finally regain my sanity, I end up starting my period and then end up back on the ClomidI just want to scream. I realize that 1 1/2 years of trying to get pregnant is not that long, but to watch my mind and my body become lumpy oatmeal is another. (and yes I do excercise; I run, bike, swim and compete in triathalons) IP: Logged stampy
Member Posts: 11
Registered: Oct 2001 posted October 19, 2001 08:22 PM Hi Kathy

63. DHHS: Fatherhood Initiative Overview
services to pregnant and parenting adolescents target services spec A townmeeting on fatherhood and male fertility issues was held on March 27 to
http://www.dadsnow.org/studies/hhs-dad.htm
FATHERHOOD INITIATIVE
Overview: Strong families are essential to the future of our nation, and both mothers and fathers have essential roles in ensuring the well-being of their children. Compared with children growing up in two-parent homes, children in single-parent families are:
  • twice as likely to drop out of high school;
  • twice as likely to have a child before age 20; and
  • more than twice as likely to live in poverty.
The Department of Health and Human Services is firmly committed to helping fathers as well as mothers provide all the different kinds of support their children need. We conduct cutting-edge research on a wide-range of issues concerning fathers and families. We provide information and encouragement to our partners at the state and local levels about the critical roles fathers have in their childrens' lives. We help empower fathers as they work to ensure the health and well-being of their children. And we support our employees both mothers and fathers in their efforts to fulfill their parental responsibilities seriously. In June 1995, President Clinton launched a government-wide initiative to strengthen the role of fathers in families. As a part of this initiative, HHS has expanded our on-going efforts to improve the life-chances for all children by making sure that our programs and policies assist men in their roles as fathers. HHS has set the following four goals for its Fatherhood Initiative:

64. Diagnosis And Management Of Basic Infertility.
The recommendations for the management of infertility are presented in the form of 5 Discuss the risks of multiple pregnancy and ovarian cysts,
http://www.guideline.gov/summary/summary.aspx?ss=15&doc_id=5567&nbr=3764

65. Diagnosis And Management Of Basic Infertility.
Evaluation of male infertility factors, including semen analysis If the vaccination of postpubertal females is undertaken, pregnancy should be avoided
http://www.guideline.gov/summary/summary.aspx?doc_id=5567&mode=full&ss=15

66. Am. J. Epidemiol. -- Sign In Page
To evaluate the effect of maternal age on waiting time to pregnancy, the authors reviewed Definition and prevalence of subfertility and infertility
http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/152/6/565
@import "/resource/css/hw.css"; @import "/resource/css/aje.css"; Skip Navigation Oxford Journals This item requires a subscription* to American Journal of Epidemiology Online. * Please note that articles prior to 1996 are not normally available via a current subscription. In order to view content before this time, access to the Oxford Journals digital archive is required. Alternatively, you may purchase short-term access on a Pay per Article basis. Please see below for more details.
Full Text
Selection Bias in Determining the Age Dependence of Waiting Time to Pregnancy
Jensen et al. Am. J. Epidemiol..
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67. CPS: Conferences: 1996 Abstracts
She will focus on the issues relating to the next meeting of the Commission, mating behaviour, pregnancy histories, and fertility regulation.
http://www.canpopsoc.org/conferences/1996_abstracts.html
Home Conferences:
1996 - Abstracts
ABORIGINAL PEOPLES OF CANADA : A DEMOGRAPHIC PERSPECTIVE
Andrew J. Siggner
, Census Analysis, Statistics Canada; Eric Guimond, Universite de Montreal; Norbert Robitaille, Universite de Montreal; Gustave Goldmann, Statistics Canada AN ADJUSTMENT TO BRASS' LOGIT MODEL OF THE PROBABILITIES OF SURVIVAL
Samar Mitra
, Sociology, Emory University It is an empirical fact that the logits of the survivorship functions of any two life tables are highly correlated. This led Brass to conclude that given the two parameters of the bivariate linear regression, any life table can be predicted from any other with a high level of accuracy. Recently, it has been shown that the linear model based on the logits can not meet a boundary condition unless the slope coefficient of the regression is equal to one. As can be expected, such a restriction reduces the goodness of fit of the model significantly. A modification of the model has been proposed in this paper by introducing the logarithm of age as another independent variable. This gives rise to a three parameter model at first, but once again, the boundary condition reduces the number of parameters to two. The model's performance seems to be highly satisfactory.

68. SD : People : Gender And Sustainability: Re-assessing Linkages And Issues (conti
quasiexclusive attention to gender/sustainability issues within the context not to mention the medical dangers of repeated pregnancy and high maternal
http://www.fao.org/sd/wpdirect/WPan0017.htm
Updated December 1997
Gender and Sustainability: Re-assessing Linkages and Issues (continued)
by George Martine
FAO Advisor on Population, Development and Environment
UNFPA Country Support Team for Latin America and the Caribbean
Santiago, Chile
and Marcela Villarreal
Senior Population Officer, Sociocultural Research
FAO Women and Population Division Previous Continues
3. Current issues in gender and sustainability
The attempt to disentangle the interactions between gender and sustainability is confounded by definitional problems as well as by common biases in the literature. Current difficulties, analyzed below, include:
  • evolving perceptions and changing praxis concerning the role of women in development;
  • a predominant focus on women rather than on gender relations and the tendency to take the category of "women" as a homogeneous entity, whose constituents are assumed to perform universal gender roles;
  • quasi-exclusive attention to gender/sustainability issues within the context of poor and rural habitats, thus neglecting the overwhelming thrust of current economic globalization.
Changing concepts and agendas: the evolution from women-in-development to gender equity and equality
The recent history of women's movements is critical in understanding current attempts to link gender and sustainability. Feminism has presented quite a heterogeneous front at any one time, and it has evolved considerably in recent decades. Several authors have attempted to classify the various currents within the women's movements (inter alia, Young [1985]; Braidotti et al. chapters 4 and 5 [1994]). However, it is not our purpose to report on these different faces and phases of feminism, except inasmuch as they relate to the current discussions of sustainability, particularly within the context of international development efforts.

69. Module: Gender & Health
·Health illness issues specific to men and women. ·pregnancy and childbirth + maternity services+ fertility in relation to women+ reproductive
http://www.dcu.ie/registry/module_contents.php?function=2&subcode=NS418

70. Intra-household Resource Allocation: Issues And Methods For Development Policy A
In this section, three papers address methodological issues related to specific their first pregnancy were in fact the most likely to come in early.
http://www.unu.edu/unupress/unupbooks/80733e/80733E0b.htm
Contents Previous Next
II. Methodological approaches to measurement
Methodological approaches to measurement
6. Combining quantitative and qualitative methods in the study of intra-household resource allocation

The meaning of cultural things

7. An approach to the study of women's productive roles as a determinant of intra-household allocation patterns
...
Micro-social research on household organization and expenditures in buenos aires, Argentina
Methodological approaches to measurement
BEATRICE LORGE ROGERS AND NINA P. SCHLOSSMAN Part I discussed a set of conceptual frameworks for identifying important factors in intrahousehold resource distribution. Economics, anthropology, and psychology focus on different aspects of the allocation process, tend to identify different sets of variables as central to the process, and so tend to use different approaches to the measurement of these variables. In this section, three papers address methodological issues related to specific techniques used by different social-science disciplines to obtain the most complete understanding of intra-household allocation patterns and their determinants. Scrimshaw's paper proposes an integration of qualitative methods such as those used in traditional ethnographic studies with more quantitative data-collection methods characteristic of survey research in economics. Each approach, the qualitative and the quantitative, has both advantages and disadvantages; combining the two strengthens both. In fact, the sequence from qualitative description to structured direct observation to survey research is now the method of data collection commonly followed by anthropologists who recognize the importance of statistical reliability and by economists who recognize that they cannot construct adequate models of behaviour without identifying and incorporating culturally specific variables.

71. The Correspondence Between Intention To Avoid Childbearing And Subsequent Fertil
Context Retrospective studies of pregnancy intendedness have revealed some Prospective studies of unintended childbearing are not beset by issues of
http://www.agi-usa.org/pubs/journals/3122099.html
@import "http://www.guttmacher.org/css/psrh2.css"; search Family Planning Perspectives
Volume 31, Number 5, September/October 1999
The Correspondence Between Intention To Avoid Childbearing and Subsequent Fertility: A Prospective Analysis
By Lindy Williams, Joyce Abma and Linda J. Piccinino Context: Retrospective studies of pregnancy intendedness have revealed some characteristics that can help identify which women are more likely than others to experience an unintended birth. A comparison of these findings with those from a prospective analysis may shed greater light on the characteristics associated with unintended pregnancy. Methods: Data were taken from the 1988 National Survey of Fertility Growth and a telephone reinterview of respondents conducted in 1990. Separate analyses were conducted of women intending to postpone childbearing for at least three years and of women intending to forgo all future childbearing. Logistic regression models were used to identify the effects of social and demographic characteristics, as well as change in marital status and certainty of intentions, on the odds of experiencing a birth in the interval between interviews. Results: Conclusions: There are at least two potential explanations for instances where the correlates of unintended births in the prospective analysis differ from those identified in retrospective studies. Certain subgroups of women may be more likely to classify births as wanted when they are asked retrospectively; alternatively, they may be more likely to experience changes in their living conditions that alter their fertility intentions.

72. National Longitudinal Surveys
Journal of Family issues 25, 1 (2004) 2960 In this paper, I identify the effects of pregnancy employment on health at birth.
http://www.nlsbibliography.org/qauthor.php3?xxx=BAUM, CHARLES L., II

73. Assisted Human Reproduction: Unsolved Issues In Parentage, Child Custody And Sup
In Vitro FertilizationCustody issues Cryopreserved Preembryos Cryopreservation allows couples to have more than one pregnancy without having to endure
http://www.mobar.org/journal/2005/janfeb/schlesinger.htm
Assisted Human Reproduction: Unsolved Issues in Parentage, Child Custody and Support
by Tim R. Schlesinger
This article surveys the common law and legislative responses to parentage, custody and support issues that arise when children are born through assisted human reproduction (methods other than sexual intercourse). It proposes certain remedies to the lack of legislative and common law framework in Missouri for dealing with these issues.
I. Introduction
The first confirmed case of TID (therapeutic Insemination with Donor sperm) took place in Philadelphia . . . in 1884, performed by William Pancoast of Jefferson Medical College. A wealthy merchant complained to a noted physician of his inability to procreate and the doctor took this as a golden opportunity to try out a new procedure. Some time later, his patient's wife was anaesthetized. Before an audience of medical students, the doctor inseminated the woman, using semen obtained from "the best-looking member of the class." Nine months later, a child was born. The mother is reputed to have gone to her grave none the wiser as to the manner of her son's provenance. The husband was informed and was delighted. The son discovered his unusual history at the age of 25, when enlightened by a former medical student who had been present at the conception. In July 2003, Louise Brown turned 25 years old. Louise Brown was the world's first "test-tube baby."

74. Nat Academies Press, Critical Perspectives On Schooling And
Economists have written about such issues under the rubric of the quantity A recent Institute of Medicine study of unintended pregnancy in the United
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309061911/html/216.html

75. Population Index - Volume 57 - Number 4
Effect of infertility on the population structure of the Herero and Mbanderu of Southern Africa. The debate on population issues in Bolivia is reviewed,
http://popindex.princeton.edu/browse/v57/n4/f.html
Volume 57 - Number 4 - Winter 1991
F. Fertility
Studies that treat quantitative fertility data analytically. References to crude data are coded under S. Official Statistical Publications . Methodological studies specifically concerned with fertility are cited in this division and cross-referenced to N. Methods of Research and Analysis Including Models , if necessary.
F.1. General Fertility
Analytical studies of quantitative birth data and reproduction rates and studies of fertility and its concomitants. Studies of age at marriage, divorce, and factors influencing family size are coded under G.1. Marriage and Divorce or G.2. Family and Household Ahonsi, Babatunde A. Components of stably high fertility in three areas of West Africa. Social Science and Medicine, Vol. 33, No. 7, 1991. 849-57 pp. Elmsford, New York/Oxford, England. In Eng.
"The constancy of fertility levels in Ghana, Senegal and southwest Nigeria since 1970 is separated into its nuptiality and marital fertility elements. The age-specific changes in the two components are examined and these show that the apparent stability in observed total fertility rates is essentially the outcome of the offsetting impact of increased marital fertility below age 25 and above age 40, over the effect of the increasing proportion of women remaining single up to 25 [years] of age. Continuity in traditional fertility behaviour and stable nuptiality has remained operative over the broad middle segment of the reproductive lifespan of women in the three areas. The paper thus concludes that West Africa is likely to continue to display stably high fertility for many years into the next century." Data are from a variety of sources.

76. Gynecology Research - IVF
Psychological adjustment of infertile women entering IVF treatment In the time period between implantation and pregnancy test, IVF couples felt very
http://womensmindbodyhealth.info/ivf527A.htm
Women’s Center for Mind-Body Health Gynecology Research (IVF) Home New The Center M-B Health ... Gynecology Obstetrics Stress Physiology M-B Methods Sleep Cancer Children Other spec. The focus of this research database is on how stress affects women's health, and options for treatment using mind-body therapies. If you are not a health care professional, see new "Medical Glossary" below. To obtain full summaries of the articles, see "How to Get Abstracts" below. General PMS Birth Control Dr. - Patient ... ** How to Get Abstracts ** IVF (In Vitro Fertilization) Psychology Stress and Depression For Men Unsuccessful Results ... What Helps Psychology JA Screening in or out of the new reproductive options: who decides and why A survey of members of the American Fertility Society, with a 47% response rate, revealed that most did not psychologically screen infertility patients prior to being accepted into their programs. Four "red flags" were significantly endorsed for treatment rejection: substance abuse, physical abuse, severe marital strife, and coercion of one spouse by another. 1993 J Psychosom Obstet Gynaecol 14 Suppl;37-44

77. THE TURKISH JOURNAL OF POPULATION STUDIES
90% (778) of 867 currently nonpregnant women whose mean of ages 31.4 were using a The empirical study addresses a number of specification issues that
http://www.cicred.org/rdr/rdr_a/revues/revue89-90/02-89-90_a.html
Back to Home page Turkey (Ankara) 02 THE TURKISH JOURNAL OF POPULATION STUDIES 1994 - VOLUME 16 98.02.1 - English - Jeanne CUSHING and Edilberto LOAIZA, DHS Program, Macro International (U.S.A.) Computer aided field editing in the DHS context: The Turkey experiment (p. 3-14) In this study two types of field editing used during the Turkey Demographic and Health Survey are compared: computer aided field and manual editing. It is known that manual editing by field editors is a tedious job in which errors especially on skip questions can be missed, however with the aid of computers field editors could quickly find all occasions on which an interviewer incorrectly followed a skip instruction. At the end of the experiment it has been found out that the field editing done with the aid of a notebook computer was consistently better than that done in the standard manual manner. (TURKEY, DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEYS, DATA COLLECTION, METHODOLOGY, ERRORS, COMPUTERS) 98.02.2 - Turkish -Tahire ERMAN and Ahmet IÇDUYGU, Bilkent Üniversitesi, Siyaset Bilimi ve Kamu Yönetimi Bülümü (Turkey) Turkey and the European Union: A comparison on population distribution and urbanization (Türkiye ve avrupa birligi: Nüfus dagilimi kentlesme açisindan bir karsilastirma) (p. 15-27)

78. Econometric Analyses Of U.S. Abortion Policy: A Critical Review - Questia Online
Each of these specification issues could significantly affect the precision of Such a measure ignores pregnancies that end in spontaneous abortion (ie,
http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=5007207784

79. PH Letter 10/95 GENITAL CHLAMYDIAL INFECTION.
Pregnant sex partners should be evaluated and treated regardless of time In 1995, the Los Angeles County infertility Prevention Project (LACIP) was
http://www.lapublichealth.org/acd/news/phl95/acdn1707.htm
PUBLIC HEALTH LETTER October 1995
Vol. 17, No. 7 GENITAL CHLAMYDIAL INFECTION EPIDEMIOLOGY
Chlamydia trachomatis infections are among the most prevalent and detrimental bacterial sexually transmitted diseases affecting men and women in the United States. Although these infections are often asymptomatic or produce mild, nonspecific signs and symptoms, if untreated they may lead to serious sequelae in women. These complications include chronic pelvic pain, infertility, ectopic pregnancy and other adverse outcomes of pregnancy. Approximately 3% of women of childbearing age and 10-29% of sexually active adolescent girls are infected with chlamydia. SCREENING FOR CHLAMYDIA The following diagnostic screening tests are recommended as screening tools for Chlamydia trachomatis: ENZYME IMMUNOASSAY (ElA) POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION (PCR) NUCLEIC ACID PROBE CELL CULTURE Specimen Type Endocervical, urethral, urine (males), conjunctival Endocervical, urethral, urine (males) Endocervical, urethral, conjunctival Endocervical, urethral, urine, conjunctival, pulmonary, rectal

80. Australiandoctor.com.au
About 95% of pregnant women are naturally immune to varicella, An early referral to a specialist genetic counselling service is advisable in those
http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/news/64/0c018e64.asp?print=true

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