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Long-term impacts of a cash plus program on marriage, fertility, and education after six years in pastoralist Kenya: A cluster randomized trial
Background: Preventing early marriage by increasing girls education has shown promise. We assessed the effects of a two-year cash plus program on marriage and fertility in a pastoralist setting in Northeastern Kenya, six years after it began. Methods: A prospective 80-cluster randomized trial followed 2,147 girls 11–14 years old starting in 2015, re-interviewing 94.2% in 2021. Interventions included community dialogues (violence prevention), a conditional cash transfer (education), health and life skills training (health), and financial literacy (wealth creation). Villages were randomized to one of four study arms: (1) violence prevention only (V-only); (2) + education (VE); (3) + health (VEH); or (4) + wealth creation (VEHW). We used analysis of covariance to estimate intent-to-treat impacts of each study arm with an education component, as well as a pooled (weighted average) study arm combining VE, VEH and VEHW, in reference to V-only, four years after the intervention ended when girls were 17–20 years old. Findings: Base specification estimates show reductions in the primary outcomes, though none statistically significant in the full sample. Estimates with extended controls are larger and the pooled study arm had significantly lower marriage and pregnancy. There are considerably larger statistically significant effects for the baseline out-ofschool subsample. Pooled estimates indicate 18.2 percentage point lower marriage compared to V-only and 15.1 percentage point lower pregnancy. For the same group pooled estimates indicate a 27.9 percentage point increase in current enrollment (compared to 7.1% in V-only) and a 1.8 grades increase (compared to 1.2 in V-only). Conclusion: This study shows the potential for interventions in early adolescence with an education component to delay marriage and fertility into late adolescence and early adulthood in a marginalized and socially conservative setting with low education and high rates of child marriage
Metabolism of progestogens used for contraception and menopausal hormone therapy
A variety of progestogens are widely used by women for contraception and menopausal hormone therapy. The progestogens undergo extensive metabolism by oral and parenteral routes of administration to form many metabolites. Although a small number of metabolites have been shown to be biologically active, most have not been tested for biologic activity. The present review shows that we know most about progesterone metabolism, followed by the metabolism of levonorgestrel and norethindrone. Very few studies have been carried out on metabolism of most of the progestogens. The clinical significance of this deficiency is that those progestogen metabolites that bind to the progesterone receptors may also bind to other steroid receptors and be responsible for some of the well-documented side effects of administered progestogens. We also discuss how obesity and genetic polymorphisms alter progestogen metabolism, and how development of oral progestogen formulations that are targeted to the colon, where the concentration of steroid-metabolizing enzymes is much lower than in the proximal gut, may have a beneficial effect on progestogen metabolism
Individual, partner, and community variables associated with method-specific contraceptive beliefs in urban and rural Kenya
Objectives: Global unmet need for contraception remains high. Contraceptive health-related beliefs are a barrier to contraceptive use but are poorly understood. This study examined quantitative differences in two health-related beliefs between pills, injectables, and implants. Study design: We used cross-sectional baseline data collected between August and December 2016 from Nairobi (urban) and Homa Bay (rural) Kenya among women aged 15 to 39 years (N = 5081). Dichotomous outcome variables were constructed for two health-related beliefs (infertility and serious health problems) for the three methods. Using a socioecological framework, possible risk factors at individual, relationship, and community levels were identified a priori. We used logistic regression to identify factors associated with method-specific beliefs. Results: Roughly a quarter of participants believed the methods caused serious health problems, while a smaller overall proportion believed the methods caused infertility. Risk factors patterned similarly across methods but differed between beliefs. In adjusted models, perceived partner approval of a method was associated with lower odds of believing it caused infertility or serious health problems. Unsatisfactory or mixed social network experiences predicted serious health problems but not infertility beliefs. Current use was associated with lower odds of believing all three methods caused serious health problems, but only implant users were more likely to believe they caused infertility. Past use was associated with higher odds of serious health problems but not infertility beliefs. Conclusions: Across three methods, negative community and perceived partner attitudes toward specific contraceptive methods were associated with higher individual-level odds of contraceptive health beliefs in Kenya. Implications: Efforts to support women who want to use contraception should focus on providing information on contraceptive health and fertility concerns, ideally targeting partners and women of all ages in addition to potential contraceptive users. It is reasonable to address these concerns broadly across commonly used contraceptive methods
Childhood vaccinations and the demand for children: Long-term evidence from India
Childhood vaccinations can increase population growth in the short term by improving the survival rates of young children. Over the long run, reductions in child mortality rates are associated with lower demand for children and lower fertility rates (known as “demographic transition”). Vaccination programs could potentially aid demographic transition by lowering child mortality and improving future health, schooling, and labor market outcomes of vaccinated mothers, but these long-term demographic benefits remain untested. We address this major gap in the literature by examining the associations of India’s national childhood vaccination program (the Universal Immunization Programme or UIP) with future demand for children. We combine data on the district-wise rollout of UIP during 1985–1990 with fertility preference data of 625,000 adult women from the National Family Health Survey of India 2015–2016. We include women who were born five years before and after the rollout period (1980–1995) and were cohabiting with a partner at the time of the survey. We divide these 20–36-year-old women into two groups: those who were exposed to UIP at birth (treatment group) and those who were born before the program (control group). After controlling for individual- and household-level factors and age and district fixed effects, treatment group women are 2% less likely to have at least one child and want 2% fewer children in their lifetime as compared with the control group. The negative associations with at least one childbirth are larger for more educated and richer women, while the associations with desired number of children is larger for uneducated and poorer women
Health Outcomes around Pregnancy and Exposure to HIV/Antiretrovirals (HOPE) study protocol: A prospective observational cohort study of reproductive-aged women living with HIV
Introduction: Over 265 000 women are living with HIV in the USA, but limited research has investigated the physical, mental and behavioural health outcomes among women living with HIV of reproductive age. Health status during the reproductive years before, during and after pregnancy affects pregnancy outcomes and long-term health. Understanding health outcomes among women living with HIV of reproductive age is of substantial public health importance, regardless of whether they experience pregnancy. The Health Outcomes around Pregnancy and Exposure to HIV/Antiretrovirals (HOPE) study is a prospective observational cohort study designed to investigate physical and mental health outcomes of young women living with HIV as they age, including HIV disease course, engagement in care, reproductive health and choices and cardiometabolic health. We describe the HOPE study design, and characteristics of the first 437 participants enrolled as of 1 January 2024. Methods and analysis: The HOPE study seeks to enrol and follow 1630 women living with HIV of reproductive age, including those with perinatally-acquired HIV, at 12 clinical sites across 9 US states and Puerto Rico. HOPE studies multilevel dynamic determinants influencing physical, mental and social well-being and behaviours of women living with HIV across the reproductive life course (preconception, pregnancy, post partum, not or never-pregnant), informed by the socioecological model. Key research areas include the clinical course of HIV, relationship of HIV and antiretroviral medications to reproductive health, pregnancy outcomes and comorbidities and the influence of racism and social determinants of health. HOPE began enrolling in April 2022. Ethics and dissemination: The HOPE study received approval from the Harvard Longwood Campus Institutional Review Board, the single institutional review board of record for all HOPE sites. Results will be disseminated through conference presentations, peer-reviewed journals and lay summaries
Curriculum development for safe spaces
SWEDD Series: Best Practice Guide no. 3
This Guide is one of a series that retrospectively documents the process of implementing the interventions of the SWEDD project, and documents good practices, challenges and lessons learned. The “Sahel Women\u27s Empowerment and Demographic Dividend” (SWEDD) project was launched in November 2015 with financial support from the World Bank, and technical support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the West African Health Organisation (WAHO). The research informing this Guide was led by the Population Council
Support for girls’ education and keeping them in school
SWEDD Series: Best Practice Guide no. 2
This Guide is one of a series that retrospectively documents the process of implementing the interventions of the SWEDD project, and documents good practices, challenges and lessons learned. The “Sahel Women\u27s Empowerment and Demographic Dividend” (SWEDD) project was launched in November 2015 with financial support from the World Bank, and technical support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the West African Health Organisation (WAHO). The research informing this Guide was led by the Population Council
Community Midwives Plus Project in Sindh: Strengthening the community-based healthcare system
Community Midwives Plus Project in Sindh: Introducing Group Antenatal Care (GANC) at the community level through community midwives
Matching Design to Desire: Developing the Next Generation of Contraceptives
This blog is part of a series in partnership with Population Council, Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition (RHSC), and Population Services International (PSI), to recognize World Contraception Day 2024. It was originally published on the Council\u27s website