March 2013 News Release Review of Scientific Literature Documents Significant Social and Economic Benefits of Contraception
March 2013 Policy Analysis Obama Administration Further Clarifies Federal Contraceptive Coverage Requirement Guttmacher Policy Review
March 2013 Policy Analysis Medication Abortion Restrictions Burden Women and Providers—and Threaten U.S. Trend Toward Very Early Abortion Heather D. Boonstra Guttmacher Policy Review
March 2013 Policy Analysis What Women Already Know: Documenting the Social and Economic Benefits of Family Planning Adam Sonfield Guttmacher Policy Review
March 2013 Policy Analysis In Search of Breakthroughs: Renewing Support for Contraceptive Research and Development Sneha Barot Guttmacher Policy Review
March 2013 Policy Analysis Besieged Family Planning Network Plays Pivotal Role Rachel Benson Gold Guttmacher Policy Review
March 2013 News Release Specialized Family Planning Clinics are a Critical Source of Care for Many Women
March 2013 Policy Analysis Toward Equity and Access: Removing Legal Barriers To Health Insurance Coverage for Immigrants Kinsey Hasstedt Guttmacher Policy Review
March 2013 Research Article Extraspousal Partnerships in a Community in Rural Uganda With High HIV Prevalence: A Cross-Sectional Population-Based Study Using Linked Spousal Data: Erratum Elizabeth A. Sully JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
March 2013 Report The Social and Economic Benefits of Women’s Ability To Determine Whether and When to Have Children Adam Sonfield, Kinsey Hasstedt, Megan L. Kavanaugh and Ragnar Anderson
March 2013 Research Article Meeting the Contraceptive Needs of Teens and Young Adults: Youth-Friendly and Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptive Services in U.S. Family Planning Facilities Megan L. Kavanaugh, Jenna Jerman and Kathleen Ethier Journal of Adolescent Health
February 2013 Report U.S. Teenage Pregnancies, Births and Abortions, 2008: State Trends by Age, Race and Ethnicity Kathryn Kost and Stanley Henshaw
February 2013 News Release In Uganda, Slow Pace in Scaling Up Access to Reproductive Health Care Services Costing Thousands of Lives and Billions of Shillings