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Des Moines Register Examines Planned Parenthood Of Greater Iowa 75 Years After Founding
The Des Moines Register on Friday profiled Planned Parenthood of Greater Iowa, which marks its 75th anniversary this year. Established in 1934 as the Iowa Maternal Health League, PPGI now includes 17 clinics offering a range of reproductive health services, as well as an education and re center. The organization originally was founded by four women with a mission of providing birth control for low-income married women. Over the years, it frequently "has been on the forefront of advances in reproductive history," according to the Register. For example, in the early 1960s, PPGI became the first provider in the Midwest to offer the oral contraceptive Ortho-Novum, leading to a more than 350% increase in its number of patients.Although antiabortion-rights advocates often discuss Planned Parenthood in relation to abortion services, the vast majority of its services are not abortion-related. Jill June, president and CEO of PPGI, said that although the organization"s services have greatly expanded since its founding, the "needs people have for the services we provide and the challenges we face in meeting those needs haven"t changed." She added, "People still face unintended pregnancies despite great technological advances in birth control and efforts to make contraception more available and to normalize contraception use" (Challender, Des Moines Register, 5/22).
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The American Diabetes Association Celebrates The Recognition Of Gary Branham And John Griffin
The American Diabetes Association, the nation"s leading health organization in the fight to stop diabetes, is pleased to announce that the National Employment Lawyers Association has honored Gary Branham, who successfully fought discrimination based on diabetes, as one of three "Workplace Heroes & Heroines." The award honors those who have made a difference in the evolution of employee rights, and advancing equality and justice in the American workplace during the past twenty years. (For more information on this award, see http://www.nela.org.)
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Light Therapy Offers New Hope For Breast Cancer Patients
A groundbreaking non-invasive breast cancer treatment will be unveiled at this year"s Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition . Scientists led by world-renowned breast cancer expert, Mr Mo Keshtgar, are the first to use photodynamic therapy (PDT) to treat what is now the most common cancer in the UK.*
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UQ Research Finds A Mother's Mental Health Can Impact On Children

Teenagers whose mothers have mental health impairments are likely to suffer behavioural problems, UQ research has found. Using data from the Mater-University Study of Pregnancy (MUSP), recent PhD graduate Belinda Lloyd studied maternal mental health and its impact on children. The MUSP is a longitudinal study of more than 7000 mothers and their children born at Brisbane"s Mater Hospital between 1981-83. "Children whose mothers experienced mental health problems as their children grew older (during adolescence) had substantially elevated rates of the behavioural and mental health problems measured in the study," Dr Lloyd said. "Also, children whose mothers experienced recurrent mental health problems were significantly more likely to display behavioural and mental health problems. "The impact of maternal mental health problems on children was found to vary, with the timing and recurrence of maternal anxiety and depression being important." Dr Lloyd said while there was a great deal of research and media interest surrounding postnatal depression, there had been less focus on the mental health of mothers over the course of child rearing. Antenatal and postnatal depression alone were found to have no negative impact on children, a finding Dr Lloyd hopes may help reduce the stigma surrounding the conditions. "This finding challenges popular beliefs that antenatal/postnatal anxiety and depression have long-lasting detrimental impacts on child behaviour and mental health," she said. "Self-doubt, feelings of guilt and social stigma could be alleviated knowing impaired maternal mental health is not necessarily going to compromise a child"s mental health and wellbeing into adolescence and beyond." The study found mothers were more likely to experience mental health problems as their children became adolescents, a link which had not previously been adequately explored or documented. "As children grow, there are increasing and more complex demands placed on parents," Dr Lloyd said. "Also, as children grow, parental marital and other intimate relationships are more likely to deteriorate or end, potentially increasing the financial, social, emotional and practical pressures and responsibilities faced by individual parents." Dr Lloyd said the research could inform health professionals of the need to support the mental health needs of mothers as their children grow. "There is capacity for a more holistic approach to child mental health and behaviour that considers the health and wellbeing of parents as a significant factor in child outcomes," she said. "A focus on maternal mental health over the lifecourse instead of isolated periods has the potential to improve the health of women and children, and therefore families and the community." Dr Lloyd"s PhD was completed through UQ"s School of Population Health under the supervision of Professor Jake Najman, Professor Gail Williams and Dr Stuart Kinner. University of Queensland


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