News

The team behind CDC's U.S. Medical Eligibility Criteria for Contraceptive Use (MEC) was another casualty in the mass layoffs at HHS -- and clinicians worry what losing this critical guideline will ...
Speaking to newsmen at a press conference here on Monday, Mr. Rama Naidu has claimed that the construction of the diaphragm wall would be completed by the year-end. “The diaphragm wall works ...
Six decades after the first oral contraceptive for women was approved in the United States, University of Minnesota researchers are one step closer to developing a non-hormonal birth control pill for ...
Glenn Youngkin after he recommended rewriting bills that passed the General Assembly, meant to enshrine a person’s right to contraception into state law. “It is an essential right that every ...
Senate budget prepares for the end of federal COVID-19 spending. After a serious injury, Terry England is welcomed at the Capitol. Democrats and Republicans bicker about potential cuts to Social ...
To keep reporting during these dark and dangerous days, please help us reach our must-hit Spring Campaign goal. Our journalism is committed to cataloging Trump’s outrages and connecting the dots to ...
The decades-long dream of creating a male equivalent of 'the pill' is moving closer to reality. Scientists in the US have begun testing a hormone-free contraceptive tablet in men called YCT-529.
Choosing the right contraception for you is an important decision. However, Doctor Nighat Arif, a GP specialising in women's health and family planning, who has over 15 years of experience in the ...
MINNEAPOLIS — The University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy released research Wednesday that lays the groundwork for the first hormone-free male birth control pill to enter clinical trials.
Among the medications available are contraception and menopause treatments. For contraception, customers can get the daily pill from £14.95, as well as emergency contraception (also known as the ...
Emergency contraception is already free of charge from most GPs and sexual health clinics. But ministers say getting it in pharmacies is a "postcode lottery" - with some councils funding free ...