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Workforce Capacity at Fqhc Clinics in South Carolina During the Choose Well Contraceptive Access InitiativeCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 06 August 2021 (has links) (PDF)
In the initial two years of the Choose Well initiative, partnered South Carolina Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) clinics reported that efforts directed toward expanding workforce capacity positively impacted contraceptive service provision and patient access. We conducted key informant interviews with FQHC clinical and administrative staff (N= 45) to assess progress in achieving this aim during the first two years of program implementation (2017 and 2018). Several respondents highlighted how funding to expand clinic workforce directly increased capacity for contraceptive provision. Other key findings supporting contraceptive provision noted that funding allowed enhanced hiring practices due to expanded service lines, increased quality of patient care, and opportunity to further service provision expansion. In conjunction, several respondents emphasized the initiative's reproductive health trainings led to improved quality of patient care services, workflow performance, and capacity for patient counseling.
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Choose Well: Summary of Mid-Point Evaluation FindingsCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 01 January 2023 (has links) (PDF)
This report summarizes key findings related to the evaluation of the Choose Well Initiative at the mid-point. Results are not complete but provide a brief summary of key findings and evidence to date.
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Publicly Funded Contraceptive Care Services in South Carolina (2017)Center for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 01 September 2020 (has links) (PDF)
State-wide clinic survey findings from Federally Qualified Health Center and Department of Health and Environmental Control family planning clinics in South Carolina. Findings include: contraceptive patient characteristics, contraceptive method provision, clinic policies and practices, and other markers of contraceptive care.
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Publicly Funded Contraceptive Care Services in Alabama (2017)Center for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 01 September 2020 (has links) (PDF)
State-wide clinic survey findings from Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) and Alabama Department of Public Health (ADPH) family planning clinics in Alabama. Findings include: contraceptive patient characteristics, contraceptive method provision, clinic policies and practices, and other markers of contraceptive care.
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Contraceptive Care in Alabama at Publicly Funded Family Planning ClinicsCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 05 May 2020 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Contraceptive Care in South Carolina at Publicly Funded Family Planning ClinicsCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 05 May 2020 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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COVID-19 Impact on Contraceptive & Clinic Services at Health Departments & Federally Qualified Health Centers in AlabamaCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 06 August 2021 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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COVID-19 Impact on Contraceptive & Clinic Services at Health Departments & Federally Qualified Health Centers in South CarolinaCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 06 August 2021 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Enhancing Rural Capacity for Contraceptive Provision Through TrainingCenter for Applied Reasearch and Evaluation in Women's Health, East Tennessee State University 11 May 2023 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Health survey in perimenopausal Chinese women in Beijing.January 1996 (has links)
Chen Juhua. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1996. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 114-133). / Abstract --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter One: --- Background and Literature Review / Chapter Part One: --- Population at Risk --- p.3 / Chapter Part Two: --- Review of Physiology of the Menopause --- p.5 / Chapter Part Three: --- Review of the Definition of Terms --- p.7 / Chapter Part Four: --- Significance of Menopausal Age --- p.8 / Chapter Part Five: --- Symptoms Associated with the Menopause --- p.11 / Chapter Part Six: --- Disturbance in Sexuality --- p.13 / Chapter Part Seven: --- Implication on the Health Status --- p.14 / Chapter Part Eight: --- Contraception for Perimenopausal Women --- p.18 / Chapter Part Nine: --- Significance and Objectives of This Study --- p.22 / Chapter Chapter Two: --- Methodology / Chapter Part One: --- Method of Data Collection --- p.23 / Chapter Part Two: --- Method of Data Analyses --- p.31 / Chapter Chapter Three: --- Results / Chapter Part One: --- Sociodemographic Characteristic --- p.36 / Chapter Part Two: --- Age at Natural Menopause --- p.38 / Chapter Part Three: --- Symptoms Associated with the Menopause --- p.41 / Chapter Part Four: --- Disturbance in Sexuality --- p.51 / Chapter Part Five: --- Illness Results from the Menopause --- p.60 / Chapter Part Six: --- Contraceptive Status --- p.66 / Chapter Chapter Four: --- Discussion / Chapter Part One: --- Age at Natural Menopause --- p.74 / Chapter Part Two: --- Symptoms Associated with the Menopause --- p.78 / Chapter Part Three: --- Disturbance in Sexuality --- p.82 / Chapter Part Four: --- Illness Results from Menopausal Transition --- p.86 / Chapter Part Five: --- Contraception for Perimenopausal Women --- p.91 / Conclusion --- p.99 / Implication and Recommendation --- p.100 / Limitation --- p.102 / Appendix --- p.105 / Reference --- p.114
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