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Dive into the research topics where Victoria Jennings is active.

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Featured researches published by Victoria Jennings.


Contraception | 2002

Efficacy of a new method of family planning: the Standard Days Method

Marcos Arévalo; Victoria Jennings; Irit Sinai

The Standard Days Method is a fertility awareness-based method of family planning in which users avoid unprotected intercourse during cycle Days 8 through 19. A prospective multi-center efficacy trial was conducted to test, in a heterogeneous population, the contraceptive efficacy of the Standard Days Method. A total of 478 women, age 18-39 years, in Bolivia, Peru, and the Philippines, with self-reported cycles of 26-32 days, desiring to delay pregnancy at least one year were admitted to the study. A single decrement multi-censoring life table analysis of the data indicate a cumulative probability of pregnancy of 4.75% over 13 cycles of correct use of the method, and a 11.96% probability of pregnancy under typical use. This article describes the study and the results. Results suggest that despite its requirement that couples modify their sexual behavior when the woman is fertile, the Standard Days Method provides significant protection from unplanned pregnancy and is acceptable to couples in a wide range of settings.


Contraception | 1999

A fixed formula to define the fertile window of the menstrual cycle as the basis of a simple method of natural family planning.

Marcos Arévalo; Irit Sinai; Victoria Jennings

A significant number of women worldwide use periodic abstinence as their method of family planning. Many of them use some type of calendar-based approach to determine when they should abstain from unprotected intercourse to avoid pregnancy; yet they often lack correct knowledge of when during their menstrual cycle they are most likely to become pregnant. A simple method of natural family planning (NFP) based on a fixed formula to define the fertile window could be useful to these women. This article reports the results of an analysis of the application of a fixed formula to define the fertile window. A large existing data set from a World Health Organization study of the Ovulation Method was used to estimate the theoretical probability of pregnancy using this formula. Information about the variable probability of pregnancy on different cycle days relative to ovulation also was considered in the analysis. Results suggest that a fixed formula in which days 8-19 of the menstrual cycle are considered to be the fertile window would provide the appropriate basis of a simple, effective, family planning method.


Contraception | 1999

The twoday algorithm: a new algorithm to identify the fertile time of the menstrual cycle

Irit Sinai; Victoria Jennings; Marcos Arévalo

Women who monitor their fertility signs and recognize when they are fertile can use this knowledge to conceive or to avoid pregnancy. Studies have shown that there is a rather small fertile window of several days during each menstrual cycle. Established methods of identifying the fertile window, such as the Ovulation and the Symptothermal methods of Natural Family Planning, can be very effective in helping couples avoid pregnancy. A new algorithm for identifying the fertile window has been developed, based on monitoring and recording of cervical secretions. The TwoDay Algorithm appears to be simpler to teach, learn, and use than current natural methods. A large existing data set from a World Health Organization study of the Ovulation Method, along with Natural Family Planning charts from women using the Ovulation Method and the Symptothermal Method, were used to determine the potential effectiveness of the TwoDay Algorithm in identifying the fertile window. Results suggest that the algorithm can be an effective alternative for low literacy populations or for programs that find current Natural Family Planning methods too time consuming or otherwise not feasible to incorporate into their services. Further studies are needed to determine the efficacy of the TwoDay Algorithm in avoiding pregnancy and to assess its acceptability to users and providers.


Contraception | 2001

Further analysis of the theoretical effectiveness of the TwoDay method of family planning

Victoria Jennings; Irit Sinai

This article validates the theoretical effectiveness of a simple approach to identify the fertile window of the menstrual cycle. The TwoDay method identifies all days in the cycle in which the woman notices cervical secretions, and the days immediately following these days, as the period in which the woman should consider herself fertile. Women who use this method are counseled to avoid unprotected intercourse on these days. The theoretical effectiveness of the TwoDay method was tested previously by applying the method rules to the menstrual cycles of women from a large data set from the World Health Organization (WHO). For the current study, we administered the same analysis to a data set from an Italian Ovulation Method center. These data are better suited for the analysis than were the WHO data because they identify all days with secretions. Results suggest that the method can be highly effective in helping women to identify correctly the days on which they should avoid unprotected intercourse if they do not wish to become pregnant, although some users may identify a few days as fertile that actually are not.


Evaluation Review | 2007

Challenging the Courtesy Bias Interpretation of Favorable Clients’ Perceptions of Family Planning Delivery

Rebecka Lundgren; Ana Huapaya; Irit Sinai; Victoria Jennings

Favorable client perceptions of provider’s interpersonal behavior in contraceptive delivery, documented in clinic exit questionnaires, appear to contradict results from qualitative evaluations and are attributed to clients’ courtesy bias. In this study, trained simulated clients requested services from Ministry of Health providers in three countries. Providers excelled in courteousness/respect in Peru and Rwanda; in India, providers were less courteous and respectful when the simulated clients chose the pill. Privacy and two-way communication were less prevalent in all three countries. The findings challenge the courtesy bias interpretation. Global results from qualitative studies may have expressed the views of the minority of clients who are not treated well by providers.


International Family Planning Perspectives | 2006

Fertility awareness-based methods of family planning: predictors of correct use.

Irit Sinai; Rebecka Lundgren; Marcos Arévalo; Victoria Jennings

CONTEXT Fertility awareness-based methods of family planning help women identify the days of the menstrual cycle when they are most likely to become pregnant. To prevent pregnancy, women avoid unprotected intercourse on these days. Efficacy of these methods may be improved if the users most likely to engage in unprotected intercourse on fertile days can be identified and counseled. METHODS Quantitative and qualitative data from efficacy studies of the Standard Days Method and the TwoDay Method of family planning, in which 928 women each contributed up to 13 cycles of method use, were examined. Multinomial logit analysis was used to compare characteristics of women who occasionally had unprotected intercourse on fertile days with those who consistently used their method correctly. The reasons participants gave for having unprotected intercourse on fertile days were also examined. RESULTS Only 23% of women had unprotected intercourse on their fertile days in one or more of the cycles they contributed to the study. The method and study site appear to have the most significant effect on correct use. Earning an income was associated with increased odds of unprotected intercourse on fertile days; higher quality of housing was associated with decreased odds. The results confirm the importance of partner cooperation for correct method use. CONCLUSION There was no clear profile of clients for whom these family planning methods would be inappropriate. However, programs offering these methods may help couples overcome potential difficulties in correct method use by including male partners and encouraging their participation in counseling sessions.


Fertility and Sterility | 2003

Application of simple fertility awareness- based methods of family planning to breastfeeding women

Marcos Arévalo; Victoria Jennings; Irit Sinai

OBJECTIVE To determine the potential efficacy of two simple fertility awareness-based methods of family planning-the Standard Days Method and the TwoDay Method-among breastfeeding women. DESIGN Analysis of pre-existing data set, collected in 1986-1990. SETTING Pre-existing data from Australia, Britain, and Canada. PATIENT(S) Seventy-three breastfeeding women in Australia, Britain, and Canada, who were followed starting 42 days postpartum, until they had at least two potentially fertile cycles (defined as cycles with adequate levels of urinary estrogens (E) and pregnanediol glucuronide and a long enough luteal phase to support a pregnancy). We examine this existing data set. INTERVENTION(S) None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Probability of pregnancy from intercourse on different days of the cycle relative to ovulation for breastfeeding women following the instructions of the Standard Days Method or the TwoDay Method. RESULT(S) These two methods may be appropriate for different groups of breastfeeding women at different times. The Standard Days Method may be appropriate after cycle regularity is established, whereas the TwoDay Method may be a more effective option earlier in the postpartum period. CONCLUSION A need remains for a more appropriate simple fertility awareness-based method during this early period.


Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care | 2005

Expanding family planning options: offering the Standard Days Method™ to women in Istanbul

Sibel Kalaça; Dilşad Cebeci; Sanda Cali; Melda Karavuş; Irit Sinai; Victoria Jennings

Background This study introduced the Standard Days Method™ (SDM), a fertility awareness-based method of family planning, to couples in a region of Istanbul, Turkey who were using a method of low effectiveness or no family planning method. The objective was to determine potential demand for, and satisfaction with, the SDM. Methods A total of 657 couples were selected by systematic sampling and offered the SDM. Those accepting this method were interviewed 1 and 3 months after starting the SDM. Results Some 47% of the participants were satisfied with the method and intended to continue using it. Conclusions Potential demand for the SDM was 80.3% (278/346 eligible women) among couples who were using a method of low effectiveness or no family planning method. Our results suggest that adding the SDM to the contraceptive method mix may benefit Turkish women.


Evaluation Review | 2007

Four Criteria to Evaluate Providers' Service-Delivery Response to New Contraceptive Introduction:

Marcos Arévalo; Rebecka Lundgren; Victoria Jennings; Ana Huapaya; Rosario Panfichi

This article presents an evaluation framework developed to assess the first-level effects of introducing the Standard Days Method (SDM) in Peru Ministry of Health clinics. Four questions are asked: 1) To what extent do providers routinely achieve SDM service delivery standards? 2) Is the time invested in SDM delivery consistent with program norms? 3) How does SDM delivery compare with delivery of established methods? and 4) How does SDM introduction affect delivery of established methods? A study at 62 clinics demonstrated the frameworks usefulness. The Standard Days Method introduction had positive overall effects on the quality of care but provider training needed adjustments.


Evaluation Review | 2011

The Role of Need for Contraception in the Evaluation of Interventions to Improve Access to Family-Planning Methods.

Rebecka Lundgren; Irit Sinai; Victoria Jennings

A nonrandomized experiment carried out in Jharkhand, India, shows how the effects of interventions designed to improve access to family-planning methods can be erroneously regarded as trivial when contraceptive use is utilized as dependent variable, ignoring women’s need for contraception. Significant effects of the intervention were observed on met need (i.e., contraceptive use by women who need contraception) but not on contraceptive use (i.e., contraceptive use by women who may or may not need contraception). Met need captures the woman’s success in overcoming barriers to access to family planning, whereas contraceptive use confounds this construct with risk of pregnancy and fertility desires. Exceptions to this rule are identified.

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Joe Leigh Simpson

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Alfredo Perez

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Adenike Bitto

Johns Hopkins University

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Chuanjun Li

Johns Hopkins University

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