February 2022 News Release COVID-19 Has Disrupted Access to Birth Control in Several US States, New Study Finds
February 2022 Research Article Financial Instability and Delays in Access to Sexual and Reproductive Health Care Due to COVID-19 Megan L. Kavanaugh, Zoe H. Pleasure , Emma Pliskin, Mia R. Zolna and Katrina MacFarlane Journal of Women's Health
February 2022 News Release The Guttmacher Institute Receives $15 Million Donation From MacKenzie Scott
February 2022 Research Article Key drivers of fertility levels and differentials in India, at the national, state and population subgroup levels, 2015–2016: An application of Bongaarts’ proximate determinants model Susheela Singh, Chander Shekhar, Akinrinola Bankole, Rajib Acharya, Suzette Audam and Tope Akinade PLOS ONE
January 2022 News Release The Guttmacher Institute Honors Akanni Akinyemi and Adesegun Fatusi with the 2021−2022 Bixby International Leadership Fellow Award
December 2021 Policy Analysis State Policy Trends 2021: The Worst Year for Abortion Rights in Almost Half a Century Elizabeth Nash
December 2021 Policy Analysis After Years of Havoc, the Biden-Harris Title X Rule Is Now in Effect: What You Need to Know Ruth Dawson
December 2021 News Release New Study Finds That 15% Of People Want Fewer Children Or To Have Children Later Because Of COVID-19
December 2021 Report The Continuing Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic in the United States: Findings from the 2021 Guttmacher Survey of Reproductive Health Experiences Laura D. Lindberg, Jennifer Mueller, Marielle Kirstein and Alicia VandeVusse
December 2021 Policy Analysis Rien qu’en chiffres : l’Impact de l’aide internationale du Canada à la planification familiale, 2020–2021
December 2021 Policy Analysis The Impact of Canadian International Assistance for Family Planning, 2020–2021
December 2021 Research Article Qualitative Data Sharing: Participant Understanding, Motivation, and Consent Alicia VandeVusse, Jennifer Mueller and Sebastian Karcher Qualitative Health Research
November 2021 Infographic Abortion restrictions are about control—they are designed to make care harder to provide, obtain and afford