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Studies in Family Planning | 1995

The impact of recent policy changes on fertility, abortion, and contraceptive use in Romania.

Florina Serbanescu; Leo Morris; Paul W. Stupp; Alin Stanescu

A national household survey of 4,861 women aged 15-44 on reproductive health issues was conducted in Romania in 1993. The survey provided the opportunity to study the impact of policy changes by comparing selected aspects of fertility, abortion, and contraceptive use before and after the December 1989 revolution, when the laws restricting abortion and contraceptive use were abolished. After abortion became legal, the total fertility rate dropped to below replacement level, while the induced abortion rate doubled. Contraceptive prevalence increased 20 percent, but augmentation of the use of traditional methods, rather than the change in legislation, accounted for 70 percent of the increase. Limited sex education and contraceptive information, mistrust and misinformation about modern methods, a lack of adequately trained providers, and a shortage or uneven distribution of contraceptive supplies are major reasons for the continued high rates of unintended pregnancy.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2010

Perinatal risk for common mental disorders and suicidal ideation among women in Paraguay

Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp; Florina Serbanescu; Edgar Tullo

To examine the association between mental health problems among pregnant women and those in the postpartum period using a nationally representative sample of 6538 women aged 15–49 years from the National Survey of Demography and Sexual and Reproductive Health in Paraguay.


International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health | 2010

Contraception matters: two approaches to analyzing evidence of the abortion decline in Georgia.

Florina Serbanescu; Paul W. Stupp; Charles Westoff

CONTEXT The abortion rate in the republic of Georgia is the highest documented in the world. Analyses using reliable data are needed to inform programs for preventing unintended pregnancy and abortion. METHODS Data from two large national household surveys conducted in 1999 and 2005 were used to assess the relationship between contraceptive use and abortion. Two analytic approaches were used. First, abortion rates were estimated for three subgroups: users of modern contraceptives, users of traditional contraceptives and nonusers of contraceptives. A decomposition method was then used to estimate the proportions of change in abortion rates that were due to changes in contraceptive use and to changes in use- and nonuse-specific abortion rates. Second, a methodology developed by Westoff was used to examine abortion rates among contraceptive users and among nonusers with differing risks of unintended pregnancy. RESULTS According to data from the 60 months before each survey, contraceptive prevalence among married women increased by 23% (from 39% to 48%) and the marital abortion rate declined by 15% (from 203 to 172 abortions per 1,000 woman-years) between 1999 and 2005. Both approaches showed that nonuse of any method was the principal determinant of the high unintended pregnancy rate and that the increase in use of modern contraceptives was a significant contributor to the recent drop in abortion (explaining 54% of the decline, according to the decomposition analysis). CONCLUSIONS Efforts to increase availability and use of modern family planning methods in Georgia should lead to a direct and measurable decline in the abortion rate.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2017

Rapid reduction of maternal mortality in Uganda and Zambia through the saving mothers, giving life initiative: results of year 1 evaluation

Florina Serbanescu; Howard I. Goldberg; Isabella Danel; Tadesse Wuhib; Lawrence H. Marum; Walter Obiero; James B. McAuley; Jane Aceng; Ewlyn Chomba; Paul Stupp; Claudia Morrissey Conlon

BackgroundAchieving maternal mortality reduction as a development goal remains a major challenge in most low-resource countries. Saving Mothers, Giving Life (SMGL) is a multi-partner initiative designed to reduce maternal mortality rapidly in high mortality settings through community and facility evidence-based interventions and district-wide health systems strengthening that could reduce delays to appropriate obstetric care.MethodsAn evaluation employing multiple studies and data collection methods was used to compare baseline maternal outcomes to those during Year 1 in SMGL pilot districts in Uganda and Zambia. Studies include health facility assessments, pregnancy outcome monitoring, enhanced maternal mortality detection in facilities, and population-based investigation of community maternal deaths. Population-based evaluation used standard approaches and comparable indicators to measure outcome and impact, and to allow comparison of the SMGL implementation in unique country contexts.ResultsThe evaluation found a 30% reduction in the population-based maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in Uganda during Year 1, from 452 to 316 per 100,000 live births. The MMR in health facilities declined by 35% in each country (from 534 to 345 in Uganda and from 310 to 202 in Zambia). The institutional delivery rate increased by 62% in Uganda and 35% in Zambia. The number of facilities providing emergency obstetric and newborn care (EmONC) rose from 10 to 25 in Uganda and from 7 to 11 in Zambia. Partial EmONC care became available in many more low and mid-level facilities. Cesarean section rates for all births increased by 23% in Uganda and 15% in Zambia. The proportion of women with childbirth complications delivered in EmONC facilities rose by 25% in Uganda and 23% in Zambia. Facility case fatality rates fell from 2.6 to 2.0% in Uganda and 3.1 to 2.0% in Zambia.ConclusionsMaternal mortality ratios fell significantly in one year in Uganda and Zambia following the introduction of the SMGL model. This model employed a comprehensive district system strengthening approach. The lessons learned from SMGL can inform policymakers and program managers in other low and middle income settings where similar approaches could be utilized to rapidly reduce preventable maternal deaths.


Social Science & Medicine | 2010

Exploring the associations between intimate partner violence and women's mental health: Evidence from a population-based study in Paraguay

Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp; Mercedes Melian; Florina Serbanescu; Mary M. Goodwin


Archive | 2008

The relationship between contraception and abortion in the Republic of Georgia. Further analysis of the 1999 and 2005 Reproductive Health Surveys.

Charles Westoff; Florina Serbanescu


Archive | 2007

Reproductive health survey Georgia, 2005 : final report

Florina Serbanescu; Paata Imnadze; Zaza Bokhua; Nick Nutsubidze; Danielle Jackson; Leo Morris


Archive | 2011

Reproductive Health Survey Georgia 2010

Florina Serbanescu; Vasili Egnatashvili; Alicia Ruiz; Danielle Suchdev; Mary M. Goodwin


Archive | 2001

Relationships between abortion and contraception in republics of the former Soviet Union.

Howard I. Goldberg; Florina Serbanescu


Archive | 1998

Young adult reproductive health survey Romania, 1996 : final report

Florina Serbanescu; Leo Morris

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Leo Morris

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Paul W. Stupp

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Isabella Danel

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Paul Stupp

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Howard I. Goldberg

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Kanako Ishida

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Mary M. Goodwin

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Claudia Morrissey Conlon

United States Agency for International Development

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James B. McAuley

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Lawrence H. Marum

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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