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The availability and use of publicly funded family planning clinics: U.S. trends, 1994-2001.


Each year, more than 20 million American American, river, 30 mi (48 km) long, rising in N central Calif. in the Sierra Nevada and flowing SW into the Sacramento River at Sacramento. The discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill (see Sutter, John Augustus) along the river in 1848 led to the California gold rush of  women obtain contraceptive contraceptive /con·tra·cep·tive/ (-sep´tiv)
1. diminishing the likelihood of or preventing conception.

2. an agent that so acts.
 services from a medical provider. (1) One in four (24%) receive that care from a publicly funded family planning clinic family planning clinic nclínica de planificación familiar

family planning clinic ncentre m de planning familial

. In addition to providing clients with a broad choice of contraceptive methods Noun 1. contraceptive method - birth control by the use of devices (diaphragm or intrauterine device or condom) or drugs or surgery
contraception

birth control, birth prevention, family planning - limiting the number of children born
, most clinics provide sexually transmitted disease sexually transmitted disease (STD) or venereal disease, term for infections acquired mainly through sexual contact. Five diseases were traditionally known as venereal diseases: gonorrhea, syphilis, and the less common granuloma inguinale,  testing and treatment; preventive care Preventive care is a set of measures taken in advance of symptoms to prevent illness or injury. This type of care is best exemplified by routine physical examinations and immunizations. The emphasis is on preventing illnesses before they occur. See also
  • Public health
, such as Pap tests Pap test, Pap smear, or Papanicolaou test (păp'ənē`kəlou), medical procedure used to detect cancer of the uterine cervix.  and pelvic exams Pelvic Exam Definition

A pelvic examination is a routine procedure used to assess the well being of the female patients' lower genito-urinary tract.
; and the information, education and counseling women and couples need to avoid unintended pregnancies and disease, and to plan for wanted children. (2) Publicly funded family planning clinics are, therefore, critical to the provision of accessible and affordable sexual and reproductive health Within the framework of WHO's definition of health[1] as a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity, reproductive health, or sexual health/hygiene  care in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  today.

The network of clinic providers varies widely in structure, with different types of providers more or less important to each state and region. Funding for clinic providers also varies widely, coming from different combinations of federal, state and local sources that are often dependent on political mood and the financial well-being of state and local governments. The two primary federal programs supporting family planning family planning

Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources.
 services are Medicaid Medicaid, national health insurance program in the United States for low-income persons; established in 1965 with passage of the Social Security Amendments and now run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.  and Title X of the Public Health Service Act.

Medicaid is a joint federal-state program that reimburses providers for services delivered to participants. More than eight in 10 family planning agencies receive Medicaid funding for contraceptive services. (3) In recent years, several states have obtained federal approval (through waivers) to expand Medicaid coverage of family planning services to individuals who would not otherwise he covered. Family planning waiver The voluntary surrender of a known right; conduct supporting an inference that a particular right has been relinquished.

The term waiver is used in many legal contexts.
 programs typically extend coverage either to postpartum postpartum /post·par·tum/ (post-pahr´tum) occurring after childbirth, with reference to the mother.

post·par·tum
adj.
Of or occurring in the period shortly after childbirth.
 Medicaid recipients for longer periods (1-5 years, compared with 60 days under standard Medicaid eligibility criteria criteria (krītēr´ē),
n.
), to individuals who lose Medicaid eligibility for any reason or to individuals solely on the basis of income. A 2004 study found that waiver programs contribute to federal cost savings and, at the same time, increase access to contraceptive care for many low-income low-in·come
adj.
Of or relating to individuals or households supported by an income that is below average.
 women. (4)

Title X is a federal program that provides dedicated family planning funds directly to clinics to support their programs. Six in 10 family planning agencies receive Title X funding (5)--money that helps bridge the gap left by other payers, (6) allows clinics to engage in outreach Outreach is an effort by an organization or group to connect its ideas or practices to the efforts of other organizations, groups, specific audiences or the general public.  and education, and ensures a uniform standard of quality care across the clinic network. (7) Since its inception INCEPTION. The commencement; the beginning. In making a will, for example, the writing is its inception. 3 Co. 31 b; Plowd. 343. Vide Consummation; Progression. , Title X has faced a variety of financial and political pressures, with funding appropriations rising and falling depending on the political will of the moment. Despite increases during the late 1990s, inflation-adjusted Title X appropriations are 60% lower now than they were in 1980 and, in recent years, have barely kept pace with inflation. (8) At the same time, clinics are facing a variety of rising medical costs, including those associated with new contraceptive methods, screening tests and treatment options. (9)

In many states, political pressures and financial crises have resulted in cutbacks for health care in general and family planning specifically. (10) Elsewhere, states have attempted to expand family planning services for low-income women through state-funded programs and Medicaid family planning waivers. (11)

The combination of political and financial pressures facing clinic providers has led many to seek alternative sources of funding and has contributed to various types of restructuring restructuring - The transformation from one representation form to another at the same relative abstraction level, while preserving the subject system's external behaviour (functionality and semantics). , including agency mergers, shifts in administrative affiliation affiliation (fil´ēā´sh  and incorporation of groups of clinics into different, usually larger, agencies. To better understand the extent and distribution of these changes and to assess whether recent changes have affected the ability of clinics to meet women's contraceptive service needs, it is necessary to monitor the size and structure of the U.S. family planning clinic network This article provides the most current information available on publicly funded family planning clinic services in the United States.

METHODS

Data

We collected service data for calendar year 2001 for all agencies and clinics providing subsidized sub·si·dize  
tr.v. sub·si·dized, sub·si·diz·ing, sub·si·diz·es
1. To assist or support with a subsidy.

2. To secure the assistance of by granting a subsidy.
 family planning services in the 50 states, the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States). , Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla. , the U.S. Virgin Islands and six Pacific U.S. territories. * Details of the methodology and definitions used for our study, which are similar to those used in previous studies, (12) are provided elsewhere. (13) We identified publicly funded family planning agencies and clinics using the list of providers enumerated This term is often used in law as equivalent to mentioned specifically, designated, or expressly named or granted; as in speaking of enumerated governmental powers, items of property, or articles in a tariff schedule.  in 1997 and current lists of Title X-supported clinics, (14) Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood

A service mark used for an organization that provides family planning services.
 Federation of America America [for Amerigo Vespucci], the lands of the Western Hemisphere—North America, Central (or Middle) America, and South America. The world map published in 1507 by Martin Waldseemüller is the first known cartographic use of the name.  clinics, (15) and community and migrant mi·grant  
n.
1. One that moves from one region to another by chance, instinct, or plan.

2. An itinerant worker who travels from one area to another in search of work.

adj.
Migratory.
 health centers. (16)

Data requests were mailed to all Title X grantees and to state family planning administrators--entities that often collect data for clinics falling within their jurisdiction. In addition, more than 1,100 requests were mailed to individual agencies We asked respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy.  for the total number of female contraceptive clients and of female clients younger than 20 served at each clinic in 2001 and whether each site received any Title X funding in 2001. We followed up non-respondents with additional mailings, faxes and phone calls. Title X grantees and state family planning administrators provided client data for 4,801 family planning clinics, and 708 agencies reported data for an additional 2,017 clinics. We contacted clinics with missing data to confirm their provision of publicly funded family planning services in 2001.

This investigation used two new strategies for indentifying clinics and collecting service data. First, the Indian Health Service The Indian Health Service (IHS) is an Operating Division (OPDIV) within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services responsible for providing federal health services to American Indians and Alaska Natives.  was able to provide a complete listing of clinics it funds and contraceptive clients served in 2001. Nationwide, nearly 200 clinics were added through this listing, and although many of these are new sites, some may have existed but been missed previously. These added sites are concentrated in Western states, where most Indian reservations are located.

Second, the California California (kăl'ĭfôr`nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W).  State Office of Family Planning was able to use a database for the Family PACT program (California's family planning Medicaid waiver program) to provide a comprehensive listing of participating providers and the number of female contraceptive clients served. We included only public and nonprofit A corporation or an association that conducts business for the benefit of the general public without shareholders and without a profit motive.

Nonprofits are also called not-for-profit corporations. Nonprofit corporations are created according to state law.
 providers listed in the database. We excluded private physician practices that receive Family PACT reimbursement Reimbursement

Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses has incurred.
, because they do not meet our definition of a publicly funded family planning provider. Therefore, our numbers represent a subset A group of commands or functions that do not include all the capabilities of the original specification. Software or hardware components designed for the subset will also work with the original.  of female contraceptive clients served under the Family PACT program.

Estimating Missing Data

We identified 2,953 agencies and 7,683 clinics providing publicly funded family planning services in 2001. Overall, the number of female contraceptive clients was reported for 89% of clinics. The 11% of clinics that did not or could not provide or estimate this number were mainly community health centers or hospitals. For these sites, we used two methods to estimate the number of clients served. For 4% of clinics, we used the number of clients reported in earlier surveys, most commonly in 1997. No earlier data were available for the remaining 7% of clinics, so we used the average number served by similar clinics (defined by region, Title X funding status, metropolitan status and provider type). The number of teenage clients served was based on the average proportion of total clients represented by teenagers at similar sites.

Data Analysis

We present bivariate bi·var·i·ate  
adj.
Mathematics Having two variables: bivariate binomial distribution.

Adj. 1.
 results for agencies, clinics and clients according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the type of provider responsible for clinic operations. We classified providers as health departments (including state, county, district and local health departments), hospitals, Planned Parenthood affiliates, community health centers (including all community and migrant health center clinics that report or are listed as receiving Bureau of Primary Care 329 or 330 funds) and other clinics (including community-based clinics that receive other Bureau of Primary Care funds, clinics that are listed as federally qualified health center A Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) is an American community-based health organization. An FQHC provides comprehensive primary health, oral, and mental health/substance abuse services to persons in all stages of the life cycle.  look-alike look-a·like also look·a·like
n.
One that closely resembles another; a double.

Noun 1. look-alike - someone who closely resembles a famous person (especially an actor); "he could be Gingrich's double"; "she's the very
 sites and other women's centers or primary care clinics that are not affiliated af·fil·i·ate  
v. af·fil·i·at·ed, af·fil·i·at·ing, af·fil·i·ates

v.tr.
1. To adopt or accept as a member, subordinate associate, or branch:
 with any other provider types). Because these data represent the full universe of clinics and clients, significance testing is not applicable, and all differences are meaningful; only differences that are substantively sub·stan·tive  
adj.
1. Substantial; considerable.

2. Independent in existence or function; not subordinate.

3. Not imaginary; actual; real.

4.
 significant or interesting are highlighted.

We also present data according to Title X funding status, metropolitan status (based on the metropolitan designation DESIGNATION, wills. The expression used by a testator, instead of the name of the person or the thing he is desirous to name; for example, a legacy to. the eldest son of such a person, would be a designation of the legatee. Vide 1 Rop. Leg. ch. 2.
     2.
 of the county), region (based on the 10 federally designated regions) and state. Finally, we examine state data according to whether a Medicaid family planning waiver went into effect between 1994 and 2001.

To assess the capacity of family planning clinics to meet women's need for publicly supported contraceptive care, we compared the numbers of women served at clinics in 2001 with 2000 estimates of the number of women in need of publicly subsidized contraceptive services in each state. * (17) Women were defined as being in need of contraceptive services and supplies if they were sexually active, fecund fe·cund
adj.
Capable of producing offspring; fertile.
 and not intentionally in·ten·tion·al  
adj.
1. Done deliberately; intended: an intentional slight. See Synonyms at voluntary.

2. Having to do with intention.
 pregnant or seeking pregnancy pregnancy, period of time between fertilization of the ovum (conception) and birth, during which mammals carry their developing young in the uterus (see embryo). The duration of pregnancy in humans is about 280 days, equal to 9 calendar months. . Of the women meeting this definition, we defined those with family incomes below 250% of poverty (estimated to be $42,625 for a family of four) or younger than 20 as needing publicly supported care.

Finally, we have developed national and state-level measures of the number of counties with at least one publicly funded clinic and the number with at least one Title X--funded clinic, and we assess what proportion of all women in need live in counties with clinic access.

RESULTS

Agencies and Clinics

In all, 2,953 publicly funded agencies administered contraceptive services at 7,683 clinics in the United States, Puerto Rico and U.S. territories in 2001 (Figure 1, page 207). Between 1994 and 2001, the overall number of agencies administering TO ADMINISTER, ADMINISTERING. The stat. 9 G. IV. c. 31, S. 11, enacts "that if any person unlawfully and maliciously shall administer, or attempt to administer to any person, or shall cause to be taken by any person any poison or other destructive things," &c. every such offender, &c.  contraceptive services declined 5%, and the number of clinics increased 8% (Table 1). Virtually all of this change occurred after 1997. On the surface, these trends in the clinic network suggest relative stability, with a small amount of growth in recent years. Beneath this outward show of stability, however, exists a much more dynamic reality.

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

The change in number of agencies administering publicly funded family planning services between 1994 and 2001 varied widely according to provider type: The numbers of health department, hospital and Planned Parenthood affiliate Affiliate

Relationship between two companies when one company owns substantial interest, but less than a majority of the voting stock of another company, or when two companies are both subsidiaries of a third company. See: Subsidiaries, parent company.
 agencies declined by 14-21%, while the numbers of community health center and other agencies increased by 14-16%. Even with a loss in numbers in numbered parts; as, a book published in numbers.

See also: Number
, health departments continue to be the most common type of family planning agency, constituting 41% of the agency universe in 2001. In comparison, community health center and other agencies each represent only 19-20% of agencies. Three out of five agencies reported receiving Title X funding at all or some of their contraceptive service sites in 2001.

Despite the overall decline in agencies, the number of clinics providing publicly supported family planning care increased between 1994 and 2001; virtually all of this growth occurred among community health center and other clinics, whose numbers increased 42% and 30%, respectively. The numbers of health department and Planned Parenthood clinics decreased 8% and 5%, respectively. The number of Title X--funded clinics increased 5%, and the number of clinics located in metropolitan counties increased 16%. Growth in the clinic network was concentrated in the West and Northwest For names and places containing the slightly longer word 'northwestern' (or variants), see .

Northwest or north west is the ordinal direction halfway between north and west on a compass. It is the opposite of southeast.
: Region IX (California, Arizona Arizona (âr'əzō`nə), state in the southwestern United States. It is bordered by Utah (N), New Mexico (E), Mexico (S), and, across the Colorado R., Nevada and California (W). , Nevada Nevada (nəvăd`ə, –vä–), far western state of the United States. It is bordered by Utah (E), Arizona (SE), California (SW, W), and Oregon and Idaho (N). , Hawaii Hawaii, island, United States
Hawaii, island (1990 pop. 120,217), 4,037 sq mi (10,456 sq km), largest and southernmost island of the state of Hawaii and coextensive with Hawaii co.; known as the Big Island.
 and the Pacific territories) and Region X (Oregon Oregon, city, United States
Oregon, city (1990 pop. 18,334), Lucas co., NW Ohio, a suburb adjacent to Toledo, on Lake Erie; inc. 1958. It is a port with railroad-owned and -operated docks. The city has industries producing oil, chemicals, and metal products.
, Washington Washington, town, England
Washington, town (1991 pop. 48,856), Sunderland metropolitan district, NE England. Washington was designated one of the new towns in 1964 to alleviate overpopulation in the Tyneside-Wearside area.
, Idaho Idaho (ī`dəhō), one of the Rocky Mt. states in the NW United States. It is bordered by Montana and Wyoming (E), Utah and Nevada (S), Oregon and Washington (W), and the Canadian province of British Columbia (N).  and Alaska Alaska (əlă`skə), largest in area of the United States but third smallest (exceeding only Vermont and Wyoming) in population, occupying the northwest extremity of the North American continent, separated from the coterminous United States ) experienced net increases in clinic numbers of 38% and 34%, respectively. By contrast, two regions experienced small declines in clinic numbers, and the others experienced modest increases of 2-12%.

The decline in agency numbers, combined with growth in the number of clinics, suggests a trend toward consolidation, mergers and expansion on the part of agencies. Confirming such a trend, we found that the average number of clinics per agency rose from 2.3 to 2.6 between 1994 and 2001 (not shown). And although the number of clinics per agency varied widely by provider type (from 1.8 for hospitals to 7.1 for Planned Parenthood affiliates), all provider types experienced an increase.

The variation in net clinic change among kinds of providers and regions of the country tells only part of the story and masks a tremendous amount of turnover throughout the period. Between 1994 and 1997, the net change in the number of clinics was 84; however, 990 clinics closed or stopped providing family planning care, and 1,074 clinics opened or added family planning to their service list. (18) Between 1997 and 2001, 968 clinics closed or stopped providing family planning care, and 1,445 clinics opened or began providing contraceptive services (not shown).

Women Served

In 2001, a total of 6.7 million women, including 1.9 million teenagers, received contraceptive services from publicly funded clinics (Figure 1). Both numbers represented 2% increases since 1994. More than one in four clients (28%) were younger than 20--a proportion that has remained remarkably constant over the years.

One-third all clients served in 2001 at publicly funded family planning clinics received care from a health department clinic, and another third from Planned Parenthood clinics (Figure 2). Hospital, community health center and other clinics each served 10-13% of clients. However, these patterns vary widely by providers' funding streams and locations: Health departments served greater proportions of clients at Title X--funded clinics than at non-Title X sites (43% vs. 11%) and at nonmetropolitan clinics than at metropolitan sites (56% vs. 26%).

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

Regional differences in the distribution of clients by provider type are even more striking. Receipt of care from health department clinics exhibited the greatest variation: No clients in Region I and 76% in Region IV received services from a health department clinic. Hospitals varied from serving 5% of clients in Region IV to 22% in Region II. Planned Parenthood clinics served more than 40% of clients in five regions but only 9% in one. Clinics designated as other providers were more common in Region I, where they served 36% of clients, than in any other region; in contrast, other clinics in Regions IV and X served only I% and 3% of clients, respectively.

* Trends by provider characteristics. Hospital clinics experienced a sharp decline (32%) in the number of clients served between 1994 and 2001 (Table 2, page 209). Planned Parenthood clinics experienced the largest absolute increase in client numbers (nearly 300,000), representing a 14% increase. And although the number of contraceptive clients served by community health centers rose by more than 100,000, or 17%, this change seems modest when one considers that the number of such clinics increased 42% over the period. Similarly, the 1% increase in contraceptive clients served at other clinics contrasts sharply with the 30% increase in the number of such sites.

Change in client numbers has not always matched change in clinic numbers, in part because of the variation among provider types in both average client caseloads and change over time. Community health centers and other clinics served the fewest clients per clinic--averaging 400-640 in 2001, an 18-22% decrease from 1994 (not shown). In comparison, the average client caseloads of health departments and Planned Parenthood clinics are much higher and have risen over the period: In 2001, nearly 800 and 2,500 clients were served, on average, by health department and Planned Parenthood clinics, respectively--a 14-20% increase from 1994.

Overall, Title X--funded clinics served 10% more clients in 2001 than in 1994; clinics not funded by Title X experienced a 12% decrease in the number of clients served over the same period. Consequently, the distribution of clients according to where they were served shifted: Sixty-nine percent of all clients of publicly funded clinics in 2001 were served by Title X--funded clinics, compared with 64% in 1994. And although Title X--funded clinics have always had a larger average annual client caseload case·load  
n.
The number of cases handled in a given period, as by an attorney or by a clinic or social services agency.


caseload
Noun
 than those not funded by Title X, this difference has widened substantially over the years. In 1994, the average client caseload for Title X--funded clinics was 25% greater than that for clinics not funded through the program (1,005 vs. 805--not shown). By 2001, Title X--funded clinics had an average caseload that was 69% higher than that of clinics not funded by Title X (1,060 vs. 628).

Change in client numbers has also varied according to clinic location, with more clients served in metropolitan locations than in nonmetropolitan counties. Regionally, growth in client numbers was highest in the West: Regions VIII, IX and X saw increases of 16%, 18% and 28%, respectively (Table 2). In contrast, Regions III and VII, representing the Mid-Atlantic states Mid-At·lan·tic States  

See Middle Atlantic States.

Noun 1. Mid-Atlantic states - a region of the eastern United States comprising New York and New Jersey and Pennsylvania and Delaware and Maryland
U.S.A.
 and parts of the Midwest Midwest or Middle West, region of the United States centered on the western Great Lakes and the upper-middle Mississippi valley. It is a somewhat imprecise term that has been applied to the northern section of the land between the Appalachians , experienced significant losses in the numbers of clients served--14% and 24%, respectively.

* State variation. Further evidence of change within the network of publicly funded family planning providers can be found by reviewing trends in the number of contraceptive clients served in each state (Table 3). In half of states, the number increased between 1994 and 2001, and in half, it declined. Eleven states experienced at least a 20% increase in contraceptive clients served by publicly funded clinics; the same number of states experienced a similarly sized decrease. Nevada, Oregon and South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
 experienced the largest increases in contraceptive clients served (41-70%); Hawaii, Missouri Missouri, state, United States
Missouri (mĭzr`ē, –ə), one of the midwestern states of the United States.
 and Wisconsin Wisconsin, state, United States
Wisconsin (wĭskŏn`sən, –sĭn), upper midwestern state of the United States. It is bounded by Lake Superior and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, from which it is divided by the Menominee
 experienced the largest losses (34-54%). About one in four states experienced relatively small (less than 5%) changes in the number of contraceptive clients served.

Data on contraceptive clients served at Title X-funded clinics in each state exhibit slightly different patterns. Overall, 30 states experienced a positive change in the number of contraceptive clients served by Title X-funded clinics between 1994 and 2001; four states had increases of more than 50%, including Nevada, where the number of clients served at Title X--funded clinics more than doubled. Two states experienced large declines: Title X--funded clinics in Hawaii and Wisconsin saw 48% fewer clients in 2001 than in 1994.

Change in contraceptive clients served by publicly funded providers was just as variable in Puerto Rico and the U.S. territories included in this analysis as in the states. Five territories experienced increases in contraceptive clients served by both all providers and Title X--funded providers. However, in Puerto Rico and two territories, the number of contraceptive clients served in all publicly funded and Title X--funded clinics declined.

* Variation by state Medicaid waiver status. Many factors are likely to impact state variation in the numbers of contraceptive clients served and in changes in these numbers. Clearly, the availability of public funds See Fund, 3.

See also: Public
 is key; however, because states differ in the mix and volatility Volatility

1. A statistical measure of the tendency of a market or security to rise or fall sharply within a period of time.

2. A variable in option pricing formulas that denotes the extent to which the return of the underlying asset will fluctuate between now and the
 of the federal, state, local and private funds used to pay for family planning services, it is difficult to find a common factor responsible for these trends. However, one critical source of funding for family planning is Medicaid. And because the period of analysis coincided with the period in which many states obtained Medicaid waivers designed specifically to increase the number of women eligible to receive publicly funded family planning care, we examined whether Medicaid family planning waivers were related to rising or falling numbers of contraceptive clients served at family planning clinics.

To this end, we compared states according to whether they had implemented a waiver between 1994 and 2001. States with Medicaid family planning waivers were also separated according to the type of waiver implemented--waivers targeting individuals below 133-200% of the federal poverty level versus those limited to women who had recently lost regular Medicaid coverage after the postpartum period The postpartum period is the period consisting of the months or weeks immediately after childbirth or delivery. Importance to health
The postpartum period is when the woman adjusts, both physically and psychologically, to the process of childbearing.
 or for any other reason.

States that had implemented the broadest family planning waivers--those based solely on income--were more likely than those without waivers or with less expansive waivers to have experienced an increase in client numbers between 1994 and 2001 (Table 4). Combined, the number of contraceptive clients served by publicly funded providers in the seven states with income-based waivers grew by 24% over the period. In five of these states, client numbers increased. * Two states had small declines (2-4%), although for one of these states the decline occurred prior to the implementation of the waiver (not shown). In comparison, the overall number of contraceptive clients served by states without waivers fell by 2%; and among states that implemented waivers expanding coverage only after the postpartum period or for women losing Medicaid coverage for other reasons, contraceptive client numbers fell by 8%. We had not anticipated a large effect for postpartum or lost coverage waivers because they are much more limited than those based on income alone--increasing eligibility to only a small proportion of poor women.

Among Title X providers in states with income-based family planning waivers, the number of contraceptive clients rose by 30% between 1994 and 2001. In comparison, increases were much more modest for Title X--funded providers in states with waivers not based on income (14%) or in states with no waiver (3%).

Coverage of Women in Need by State

Another potential explanation for state change in clients served would be a change in the demand for publicly funded care due to change in the size or characteristics of the population. To assess this possibility, we compared the changes in the numbers of women in need of publicly funded contraceptive services and supplies by state between 1995 and 2000 with the changes in clients served between 1994 and 2001. The data were weakly weak·ly  
adj. weak·li·er, weak·li·est
Delicate in constitution; frail or sickly.

adv.
1. With little physical strength or force.

2. With little strength of character.
 correlated cor·re·late  
v. cor·re·lat·ed, cor·re·lat·ing, cor·re·lates

v.tr.
1. To put or bring into causal, complementary, parallel, or reciprocal relation.

2.
 (correlation coefficient Correlation Coefficient

A measure that determines the degree to which two variable's movements are associated.

The correlation coefficient is calculated as:
=.30), and none of the 11 states with declines in clients served of at least 20% had similarly large negative change in women in need (five of these states experienced increases in the number of women in need, and the other six experienced declines of 1-5%--not shown). On the other hand, seven of the 11 states with increases of 20% or more in clients served had increases in women in need of 2-23%. These findings suggest that although increases in women in need were sometimes associated with increases in clients served, those states that experienced substantial declines in clients served were clearly not responding to changing demand due to fewer women in need.

To determine the ongoing ability of publicly funded family planning clinics to meet local needs, we estimated what proportion of the need for publicly funded contraceptive services was met by clinics nationally and in each state by dividing the number served in clinics by the number of women in need. (These proportions are proxies for met need and do not provide a complete measure of unmet un·met  
adj.
Not satisfied or fulfilled: unmet demands. 
 need for contraceptive services because they exclude women who receive Medicaid-covered services from private providers, as well as users of nonprescription non·pre·scrip·tion
adj.
Sold legally without a physician's prescription; over-the-counter.
 methods who have not made a visit for contraceptive services. In addition, they include some nonpoor women who are served by publicly funded clinics even though they do not fit the income definition of women in need.) Nationwide, publicly funded family planning clinics met 41% of the need for such services in 2001--a 3% increase from 1994 (Table 5). Title X--funded clinics alone met 28% of the national need for publicly funded family planning services--an 11% increase from 1994.

By state, the proportion of need met by all publicly funded family planning clinics in 2001 varied from 15% in Hawaii to 76% in Alaska. Among clinics funded by Title X, the proportion varied from 14% in Indiana Indiana, state, United States
Indiana, midwestern state in the N central United States. It is bordered by Lake Michigan and the state of Michigan (N), Ohio (E), Kentucky, across the Ohio R. (S), and Illinois (W).
 to 53% in Mississippi Mississippi, state, United States
Mississippi (mĭs'əsĭp`ē), one of the Deep South states of the United States. It is bordered by Alabama (E), the Gulf of Mexico (S), Arkansas and Louisiana, with most of the border formed by
. The proportion of women in need served by Title X--funded clinics in 2001 exceeded 50% in four states--Delaware, Mississippi, Montana Montana (mŏntăn`ə), Rocky Mt. state in the NW United States. It is bounded by North Dakota and South Dakota (E), Wyoming (S), Idaho (W), and the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, and Saskatchewan (N).  and West Virginia West Virginia, E central state of the United States. It is bordered by Pennsylvania and Maryland (N), Virginia (E and S), and Kentucky and, across the Ohio R., Ohio (W). Facts and Figures


Area, 24,181 sq mi (62,629 sq km). Pop.
. In five states--Arizona, Hawaii, Indiana, Utah and Wisconsin--this proportion was 14-15%.

Comparing the proportions of need met by clinics in 2001 and in 1994 reveals which states have experienced improved clinic capacity (Table 5). In one-third of states, clinic capacity improved, with met need increasing by 5% or more; in four states (California, Maine Maine, ship
Maine, U.S. battleship destroyed (Feb. 15, 1898) in Havana harbor by an explosion that killed 260 men. The incident helped precipitate the Spanish-American War (Apr., 1898). Commanded by Capt. Charles Sigsbee, the ship had been sent (Jan.
, Oregon, South Carolina), the increase in met need exceeded 25%, varying from 27% to 65%. However, in another one-third of states, clinic capacity declined, with met need decreasing by 5% or more; six states (Arizona, Hawaii, Iowa, Missouri, Rhode Island Rhode Island, island, United States
Rhode Island, island, 15 mi (24 km) long and 5 mi (8 km) wide, S R.I., at the entrance to Narragansett Bay. It is the largest island in the state, with steep cliffs and excellent beaches.
 and Wisconsin) and the District of Columbia experienced 25-55% declines in the proportion of need met by clinics. Overall, 21% of U.S. women in need of publicly funded contraceptive care lived in a state where the proportion of need met by clinics declined by at least 5% (not shown).

Finally, we examined change in the proportion of need met by clinics according to state Medicaid waiver status. In 1994, there was no difference by waiver status in the proportion of need met by clinics. However, by 2001, states that had implemented income-based Medicaid waivers since 1994 had experienced a 27% increase in the proportion of need met by clinics (from 39% to 50%). In states without any Medicaid family planning waiver, the proportion remained stable at 40%, whereas in states with postpartum or lost coverage waivers, the proportion decreased from 38% to 34%. Title X--funded clinics in states with income-based Medicaid waivers reported a one-third increase in met need; the proportion rose from 25% in 1994 to 34% in 2001.

Clinic Accessibility

In 2001, 85% of all U.S. counties had at least one publicly funded family planning clinic (Table 6). Twenty-one twenty-one: see blackjack.  states had at least one clinic in every county; four (Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska Nebraska (nəbrăs`kə), Great Plains state of the central United States. It is bordered by Iowa and Missouri, across the Missouri R. (E), Kansas (S), Colorado (SW), Wyoming (NW), and South Dakota (N).  and North Dakota North Dakota, state in the N central United States. It is bordered by Minnesota, across the Red River of the North (E), South Dakota (S), Montana (W), and the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba (N). ) had clinics in fewer than 50% of counties. Counties without clinics were typically the least populated pop·u·late  
tr.v. pop·u·lat·ed, pop·u·lat·ing, pop·u·lates
1. To supply with inhabitants, as by colonization; people.

2.
 (not shown). Ninety-eight percent of all women in need of publicly funded contraceptive services and supplies lived in counties with at least one clinic; however, in six states, fewer than 90% of women in need lived in counties with a clinic. Nearly three in four U.S. counties had at least one Title X--funded clinic, and 94% of women in need lived in these counties. In five states, two-thirds or fewer of women in need lived in these counties.

DISCUSSION

Limitations

Although we used rigorous methods to obtain accurate information on the number of clinics and contraceptive clients served, some error may have occurred. Given rapid change among U.S. health care providers, some qualified sites may have been omitted. In addition, some agencies provided estimates of contraceptive clients served per year because they did not have documented service figures. Finally, for 11% of clinics, we estimated the number of contraceptive clients served on the basis of prior data or the experience of similar clinics. Each step may have introduced error into the final counts of providers and contraceptive clients. Although the potential level of error is unlikely to be large or to significantly impact national or state-level estimates of contraceptive clients, it may have greater impact on some county-level estimates.

Conclusions

Publicly funded family planning clinics continue to play a critical role in the delivery of contraceptive services and supplies to millions of American women. Over the past decade, this network of clinics has served 6-7 million contraceptive clients each year. However, the relative stability observed ob·serve  
v. ob·served, ob·serv·ing, ob·serves

v.tr.
1. To be or become aware of, especially through careful and directed attention; notice.

2.
 when simply counting total women served masks a tremendous amount of fluctuation Fluctuation

A price or interest rate change.
 and turmoil within the system. Between 1994 and 2001, nearly 2,000 clinics--about one in four--closed or stopped providing family planning services. During the same time, more than 2,500 clinics opened or began providing family planning care.

Two broad types of change have occurred in the network of publicly funded family planning clinics. First are structural changes, characterized char·ac·ter·ize  
tr.v. character·ized, character·iz·ing, character·iz·es
1. To describe the qualities or peculiarities of: characterized the warden as ruthless.

2.
 by changes in the distribution of clinics and clients according to provider type. Second are capacity changes, revealed in the absolute gains and losses in clinics and clients served, and in changes in the proportion of need met by clinics.

Structural change in the clinic network has resulted, in part, because family planning--focused providers have consolidated con·sol·i·date  
v. con·sol·i·dat·ed, con·sol·i·dat·ing, con·sol·i·dates

v.tr.
1. To unite into one system or whole; combine:
 their operations and are now serving more clients at fewer sites, while primary care--focused providers have dispersed dis·perse  
v. dis·persed, dis·pers·ing, dis·pers·es

v.tr.
1.
a. To drive off or scatter in different directions: The police dispersed the crowd.

b.
 and have a greater number of sites, each serving fewer contraceptive clients. Planned Parenthood and health department clinics--the providers most likely to report a reproductive health focus (19)--have experienced a tremendous amount of restructuring through mergers, site closings and concentration of care at fewer sites. At the same time, the total number of clients served by these sites has risen, indicating that the client base for health department and Planned Parenthood facilities is not shrinking. Community health centers (typically providers of primary health care) and other agencies were the only provider types that experienced net increases in sites between 1994 and 2001. However, because each site serves only a small number of contraceptive clients and, on average, serves fewer contraceptive clients now than it did in the past, the number of clients has not increased proportionately pro·por·tion·ate  
adj.
Being in due proportion; proportional.

tr.v. pro·por·tion·at·ed, pro·por·tion·at·ing, pro·por·tion·ates
To make proportionate.
.

From the point of view of women seeking services, the implications of these structural changes are likely to be considerable. High turnover in facilities means that many women will not have a stable source of ongoing care. Some women may lose access to a site they know well or like and may not know of an alternative source; others may need to travel farther to access care when sites close or merge See mail merge and concatenate. . The increase in numbers of community health center clinics offering contraceptive services could offset some negative consequences of consolidation. And because women may already visit community health centers for other types of primary care, they may find it convenient to obtain contraceptive care from these providers. However, community health centers are usually less likely than other providers to offer a wide choice of contraceptive methods, on-site on-site
adj.
Done or located at the site, as of a particular activity: on-site monitoring of a production run; an on-site film shoot.
 availability of oral contraceptives Oral Contraceptives Definition

Oral contraceptives are medicines taken by mouth to help prevent pregnancy. They are also known as the Pill, OCs, or birth control pills.
 or other options, such as delaying pelvic exams when prescribing hormonal hormonal,
adj/n beneficial component in some essential oils that helps to bring hormone secretions to normal levels.


hormonal

emanating from or pertaining to hormones.
 methods. (20)

Regional and state trends in the numbers of clinics and clients served reveal evidence of change in the capacity of the family planning clinic network. Clinic closures have not always been compensated compensated /com·pen·sat·ed/ (kom´pen-sa?tid) counterbalanced; offset.  for by clinic openings in the same area; some regions experienced net losses in clinics and clients served, while others experienced net gains. Moreover, even within regions, there was considerable state variation between 1994 and 2001 in the numbers of clinics and clients served and in the proportion of women in need who were served by clinics. Although a majority of states either maintained or improved clinic capacity, one-third of states--in which 21% of U.S. women in need reside--had 5-55% declines in the proportion of need met by clinics.

We were able to investigate the contribution of one important factor in these trends--expansion of Medicaid-covered family planning care under state-initiated waiver programs. Between 1994 and 2001, seven states implemented income-based family planning waiver programs that expanded eligibility for Medicaid-covered contraceptive care to low-income women. In these states, one-quarter more clients were served by clinics in 2001 than in 1994, and the proportion of met need increased by 27%, so that 50% of all women in need of publicly funded contraceptive care received such care in clinics. In contrast, states with less expansive or no waivers served fewer clients in 2001 than in 1994, and the proportion of need met by clinics remained at or below 40%.

These findings provide evidence that implementation of income-based Medicaid family planning waivers raises the capacity of local clinic networks and improves access to contraceptive care for more women in need of such care, confirming the results of an earlier evaluation. (21) The impact of waivers on clinic capacity may also help to explain the striking regional variation observed: Three of the seven states with income-based waivers are located in Regions IX and X, and those regions experienced the largest net increases in clinic and client numbers. However, factors other than the waivers may have contributed to improved family planning clinic capacity among waiver states. For example, the same priorities that led some states to seek family planning waivers in the first place--such as a commitment to increasing health care access in general or family planning care specifically--may be associated with other, unmeasured factors that have improved clinic capacity in these states.

Also vital to the family planning clinic network is continued funding through Title X. Between 1994 and 2001, the number of clinics receiving Title X funding increased by 5%, and the number of contraceptive clients they served rose by 10%. Moreover, in 2001, more than one-quarter of the need for publicly funded contraceptive care was met by Title X--funded clinics--an 11% increase over the period. More impressive is the increased capacity of Title X--funded sites located in states with Medicaid family planning waivers. In these states, the capacity of Title X--funded sites to serve women in need of publicly funded care improved, with met need increasing by 33% between 1994 and 2001 (compared with the 27% increase among all public clinics in waiver states), indicating the added value Added value in financial analysis of shares is to be distinguished from value added. Used as a measure of shareholder value, calculated using the formula:

Added Value = Sales - Purchases - Labour Costs - Capital Costs
 that Title X funding brings to these providers.

A troubling change is the large number of states that experienced a reduction in the capacity of publicly funded family planning clinics to provide subsidized contraceptive care to low-income women and teenagers, as measured by a decline in met need or a high proportion of women in need living in counties without a publicly funded clinic. Further investigation is needed to learn what circumstances CIRCUMSTANCES, evidence. The particulars which accompany a fact.
     2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or
 have led to declining clinic capacity, the impact it has had on low-income women and the efforts that are needed to reverse it. At the least, a decline in publicly funded family planning care will likely force some women to seek more expensive care from private physicians, shift to less effective contraceptive methods or forgo contraception contraception: see birth control.
contraception

Birth control by prevention of conception or impregnation. The most common method is sterilization. The most effective temporary methods are nearly 99% effective if used consistently and correctly.
 and related preventive care altogether.

One can hope that lessons will be learned from the success of states that have implemented income-based Medicaid waiver programs. Not only can clinic capacity be increased and access to care improved, but such programs can save public money by realizing the basic benefits of family planning--prevention of unintended pregnancies and the costs associated with childbearing child·bear·ing
n.
Pregnancy and parturition.



childbearing adj.
 among poor and low-income women who would have preferred to delay or avoid pregnancy. In a climate where state fiscal crises abound, programs that save public money and increase access to care deserve special attention.

It is also important to remember the critical role that Title X funding continues to play, even for clinics in states with Medicaid waivers. Because Title X funding is not tied to particular services rendered or clients served, it remains one of few sources that clinics can draw upon to cover the gap between Medicaid reimbursements and the actual cost of care, provide educational and outreach activities, and lessen less·en  
v. less·ened, less·en·ing, less·ens

v.tr.
1. To make less; reduce.

2. Archaic To make little of; belittle.

v.intr.
To become less; decrease.
 the financial burden caused by increasing costs for new methods and diagnostic testing Diagnostic testing
Testing performed to determine if someone is affected with a particular disease.

Mentioned in: Von Willebrand Disease
. (22)

Over time, the network of publicly funded family planning clinics has proved its resiliency The ability to recover from a failure. The term may be applied to hardware, software or data. , adapting to shifts in health care delivery, structure and financing, while continuing to meet the contraceptive service needs of millions of poor and low-income women. In some states, demonstrated improvements in clinic capacity are welcome news. Elsewhere, fewer clinics, fewer clients served and declines in the proportion of need met by clinics are likely casualties of local and state funding crises combined with political priorities that are either noncommittal or openly hostile to family planning as a public good.
TABLE 1. Percentage distribution of publicly funded family
planning agencies and clinics, 2001, 1997 and 1994; and
percentage change in the number of agencies and clinics
between 1994 and 2001--all by selected characteristics

Characteristic                    2001          1997

AGENCIES                          (N=           (N=
                                 2,953)        3,117)

Provider type
Community/migrant
  health center                   20.1          17.7
Health department                 41.2          45.8
Hospital                          15.1          15.0
Planned Parenthood                 4.3           4.4
Other                             19.3          17.0

Title X funding
Yes *                             58.4          60.8
No                                41.6          39.2

CLINICS                           (N=           (N=
                                 7,683)        7,206)

Provider type

Community/migrant
  health center                   22.5          20.9
Health department                 37.4          40.3
Hospital                          10.6          10.5
Planned Parenthood                11.6          12.7
Other                             17.9          15.7

Title X funding
Yes                               57.1          59.1
No                                42.9          40.9

Metropolitan location
Yes                               57.2          53.7
No                                42.8          46.3

Region ([dagger])

I                                  4.2           4.4
II                                 6.7           7.0
III                               10.1          10.4
IV                                21.8          22.9
V                                 13.3          13.8
VI                                13.4          14.7
VII                                5.4           5.7
VIII                               5.1           4.9
IX                                14.3          11.5
X                                  5.8           4.7

Total                            100.0         100.0

Characteristic                    1994       % change,
                                             1994-2001

AGENCIES                          (N=           -5.3
                                 3,119)

Provider type
Community/migrant
  health center                   16.4          15.8
Health department                 45.3         -13.9
Hospital                          17.1         -16.3
Planned Parenthood                 5.1         -20.8
Other                             16.0          13.8

Title X funding
Yes *                             59.9          -7.7
No                                40.1          -1.8

CLINICS                           (N=            7.9
                                 7,122

Provider type

Community/migrant
  health center                   17.1          41.9
Health department                 43.9          -8.0
Hospital                          11.0           3.7
Planned Parenthood                13.2          -5.1
Other                             14.9          30.2

Title X funding
Yes                               59.0           4.5
No                                41.0          12.8

Metropolitan location
Yes                               53.2          16.0
No                                46.8          -1.4

Region ([dagger])

I                                  4.5           1.6
II                                 6.8           7.1
III                               11.0          -0.4
IV                                22.8           3.1
V                                 13.9           2.8
VI                                14.8          -2.6
VII                                5.6           4.8
VIII                               4.9          11.8
IX                                11.2          37.6
X                                  4.6          34.4

Total                            100.0            na

* Receives Title X funding at some or all agency sites. ([dagger])
Region I--Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island and Vermont. Region II--New Jersey, New York, Puerto Rico and
the Virgin Islands. Region III--Delaware, District of Columbia,
Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. Region IV--Alabama,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina
and Tennessee. Region V--Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio
and Wisconsin. Region VI--Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma
and Texas. Region VII--Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. Region
VIII--Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming.
Region IX--Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, American Samoa, Guam,
Mariana Islands, Marshall Islands, Micronesia and Palau. Region
X--Alaska, Idaho, Oregon and Washington. Note. na=not applicable.

TABLE 2. Percentage distribution of female contraceptive
clients served by publicly funded family planning providers,
2001, 1997 and 1994; and percentage change in client numbers
between 1994 and 2001--all by selected characteristics

Characteristic                   2001          1997

No. in 000s                     6,719         6,555

Provider type
Community/migrant
  health center                  10.4          10.4
Health department                33.1          35.1
Hospital                         10.4          12.5
Planned Parenthood               33.0          28.6
Other                            13.1          13.5

Title X funding
Yes                              69.2          65.5
No                               30.8          34.5

Metropolitan location
Yes                              76.6          73.3
No                               23.4          26.7

Region *
I                                 4.9           5.1
II                                8.9           8.7
III                               8.5           9.4
IV                               18.9          20.5
V                                14.7          15.5
VI                               12.9          13.2
VII                               4.0           4.7
VIII                              3.9           3.5
IX                               17.9          15.0
X                                 5.3           4.4

Total                           100.0         100.0

Characteristic                   1994       % change,
                                            1994-2001

No. in 000s                     6,572            na

Provider type
Community/migrant
  health center                   9.1          16.8
Health department                32.4           4.4
Hospital                         15.7         -32.1
Planned Parenthood               29.6          14.1
Other                            13.2           1.4

Title X funding
Yes                              64.2          10.2
No                               35.8         -12.0

Metropolitan location
Yes                              74.4           5.3
No                               25.6          -6.6

Region *
I                                 5.2          -4.7
II                                9.5          -3.9
III                              10.2         -14.4
IV                               18.4           5.2
V                                16.1          -7.1
VI                               12.0          10.1
VII                               5.4         -23.9
VIII                              3.5          16.3
IX                               15.6          18.0
X                                 4.2          28.3

Total                           100.0          22.0

* See Table 1 for composition of regions. Note: na=not applicable.

TABLE 3. Number of female contraceptive clients served at all publicly
funded family planning clinics and of Title X-funded clinics, 2001 and
1994, and percentage change in client numbers between 1994 and
2001--all by state or territory

State/                     All
territory                  2001           1994           % change

U.S. total                 6,718,700      6,571,830        2.2
Alabama                      113,310        118,410       -4.3
Alaska                        24,530         20,370       20.4
Arizona                      100,680        132,190      -23.8
Arkansas                      81,340         82,670       -1.6
California                 1,014,890        803,970       26.2
Colorado                     132,890        105,590       25.9
Connecticut                   70,560         92,630      -23.8
Delaware                      20,600         20,850       -1.2
D.C.                          19,140         25,660      -25.4
Florida                      266,100        252,790        5.3
Georgia                      199,840        202,610       -1.4
Hawaii                         9,020         19,490      -53.7
Idaho                         41,720         34,650       20.4
Illinois                     206,340        211,660       -2.5
Indiana                      147,260        144,180        2.1
Iowa                          69,230         91,570      -24.4
Kansas                        57,660         70,070      -17.7
Kentucky                     133,450        124,080        7.6
Louisiana                     82,810         79,910        3.6
Maine                         49,150         40,970       20.0
Maryland                      82,230        105,870      -22.3
Massachusetts                138,640        131,620        5.3
Michigan                     233,810        239,100       -2.2
Minnesota                    103,880        101,300        2.5
Mississippi                  121,240        121,110        0.1
Missouri                     108,590        164,030      -33.8
Montana                       33,920         35,770       -5.2
Nebraska                      35,170         30,300       16.1
Nevada                        47,730         33,960       40.5
New Hampshire                 30,680         35,050      -12.5
New Jersey                   129,630        141,010       -8.1
New Mexico                    68,500         64,120        6.8
New York                     446,500        439,130        1.7
North Carolina               194,250        171,010       13.6
North Dakota                  16,010         17,290       -7.4
Ohio                         201,040        212,630       -5.5
Oklahoma                      95,260         78,780       20.9
Oregon                       123,270         72,550       69.9
Pennsylvania                 293,900        306,450       -4.1
Rhode Island                  16,200         21,120      -23.3
South Carolina               139,070         85,280       63.1
South Dakota                  22,950         22,770        0.8
Tennessee                    102,870        131,930      -22.0
Texas                        540,620        483,040       11.9
Utah                          41,660         32,930       26.5
Vermont                       20,620         21,110       -2.3
Virginia                      97,150        135,480      -28.3
Washington                   168,510        151,500       11.2
West Virginia                 59,400         73,710      -19.4
Wisconsin                     93,010        150,860      -38.3
Wyoming                       16,770         12,940       29.6

American Samoa                 4,470          2,690       66.2
Guam                           3,180          1,000      218.0
Mariana Islands                3,940          1,930      104.1
Marshall Islands               5,420          3,920       38.3
Micronesia                    14,360         21,370      -32.8
Palau                          1,990          1,030       93.2
Puerto Rico                   19,160         38,820      -50.6
Virgin Islands                 2,600          3,010      -13.6

State/                     Title X-funded
territory                  2001           1994           % change

U.S. total                 4,650,310      4,221,620       10.2
Alabama                       94,410         89,430        5.6
Alaska                        10,450          6,690       56.2
Arizona                       46,730         33,330       40.2
Arkansas                      71,770         73,510       -2.4
California                   672,170        501,080       34.1
Colorado                      57,660         50,630       13.9
Connecticut                   47,430         49,810       -4.8
Delaware                      20,600         14,790       39.3
D.C.                          14,390         14,540       -1.0
Florida                      197,170        168,640       16.9
Georgia                      178,710        169,880        5.2
Hawaii                         9,020         17,480      -48.4
Idaho                         37,090         29,590       25.3
Illinois                     154,620        162,670       -4.9
Indiana                       48,970         77,750      -37.0
Iowa                          57,470         74,160      -22.5
Kansas                        43,770         47,720       -8.3
Kentucky                     113,650        114,470       -0.7
Louisiana                     75,950         58,510       29.8
Maine                         30,600         35,510      -13.8
Maryland                      71,410         72,210       -1.1
Massachusetts                 73,460         70,530        4.2
Michigan                     187,280        127,170       47.3
Minnesota                     44,290         36,520       21.3
Mississippi                  102,570         78,920       30.0
Missouri                      76,010         93,500      -18.7
Montana                       28,820         28,380        1.6
Nebraska                      33,550         27,110       23.8
Nevada                        36,350         17,400      108.9
New Hampshire                 27,890         31,730      -12.1
New Jersey                   103,590        102,010        1.5
New Mexico                    34,580         40,170      -13.9
New York                     295,360        237,670       24.3
North Carolina               142,230        112,680       26.2
North Dakota                  13,920         14,250       -2.3
Ohio                         136,010        141,290       -3.7
Oklahoma                      71,580         53,620       33.5
Oregon                        66,700         35,130       89.9
Pennsylvania                 262,810        262,190        0.2
Rhode Island                  13,680         13,150        4.0
South Carolina               121,360         65,810       84.4
South Dakota                  15,970         17,070       -6.4
Tennessee                     81,730        101,810      -19.7
Texas                        253,960        233,300        8.9
Utah                          21,430         15,430       38.9
Vermont                       10,510          9,240       13.7
Virginia                      75,990         79,130       -4.0
Washington                   103,150         88,290       16.8
West Virginia                 56,340         70,820      -20.4
Wisconsin                     41,380         79,050      -47.7
Wyoming                       13,390         11,080       20.8

American Samoa               114,470          2,690       66.2
Guam                           3,180          1,000      218.0
Mariana Islands                3,940          1,630      141.7
Marshall Islands               5,420          3,920       38.3
Micronesia                    14,360         21,150      -32.1
Palau                          1,990          1,030       93.2
Puerto Rico                   14,410         30,340      -52.5
Virgin Islands                 2,600          3,010      -13.6

TABLE 4. Number of female contraceptive clients served at all publicly
funded family planning clinics and at Title X-funded clinics, 2001 and
1994, and percentage change in client numbers between 1994 and 2001--by
state Medicaid waiver status

Waiver                              All
status                              2001          1994          %
                                                                change

Income-based waiver *               1,708,890     1,378,500     24.0
Postpartum/lost
  coverage waiver ([dagger])        1,040,900     1,135,980     -8.4
No waiver ([double dagger])         3,913,790     3,983,580     -1.8

Waiver                              Title X-funded
status                              2001          1994          %
                                                                change

Income-based waiver *               1,164,140     893,420       30.3
Postpartum/lost
  coverage waiver ([dagger])        720,960       633,290       13.8
No waiver ([double dagger])         2,714,840     2,630,140     3.2

* States with income-based waivers are Alabama, Arkansas, California,
New Mexico, Oregon, South Carolina and Washington. ([dagger]) States
with postpartum waivers or waivers for women who have lost Medicaid
coverage for other reasons are Arizona, Delaware, Florida, Maryland,
Missouri, New York and Rhode Island. ([double dagger]) All remaining
States and the District of Columbia (excludes territories and Puerto
Rico).

TABLE 5. Number of women in need of publicly funded family planning
services in 2000 and 1995, percentage of women in need served at all
publicly funded clinics and at Title X-funded clinics in 2001 and 1994,
and percentage change in met need between 1994 and 2001, all by state
and Medicaid waiver status

State and                    No. in need,    % served, 2001
waiver                       2000 *          All publicly      Title X-
status                                       funded            funded
                                             clinics           clinics

U.S. total                   16,396,050      40.6              28.1
Alabama                         275,750      41.1              34.2
Alaska                           32,230      76.1              32.4
Arizona                         314,600      32.0              14.9
Arkansas                        165,250      49.2              43.4
California                    2,110,740      48.1              31.8
Colorado                        229,000      58.0              25.2
Connecticut                     161,100      43.8              29.4
Delaware                         39,760      51.8              51.8
D.C.                             41,260      46.4              34.9
Florida                         848,380      31.4              23.2
Georgia                         472,120      42.3              37.9
Hawaii                           61,390      14.7              14.7
Idaho                            80,360      51.9              46.1
Illinois                        694,420      29.7              22.3
Indiana                         357,070      41.2              13.7
Iowa                            168,760      41.0              34.1
Kansas                          157,410      36.6              27.8
Kentucky                        240,430      55.5              47.3
Louisiana                       309,360      26.8              24.6
Maine                            78,700      62.4              38.9
Maryland                        243,480      33.8              29.3
Massachusetts                   333,710      41.5              22.0
Michigan                        562,410      41.6              33.3
Minnesota                       253,250      41.0              17.5
Mississippi                     194,380      62.4              52.8
Missouri                        342,080      31.7              22.2
Montana                          54,990      61.7              52.4
Nebraska                        102,430      34.3              32.8
Nevada                          110,030      43.4              33.0
New Hampshire                    62,840      48.8              44.4
New Jersey                      395,100      32.8              26.2
New Mexico                      127,390      53.8              27.1
New York                      1,195,150      37.4              24.7
North Carolina                  455,030      42.7              31.3
North Dakota                     41,810      38.3              33.3
Ohio                            657,860      30.6              20.7
Oklahoma                        217,250      43.8              32.9
Oregon                          196,920      62.6              33.9
Pennsylvania                    715,330      41.1              36.7
Rhode Island                     66,370      24.4              20.6
South Carolina                  244,440      56.9              49.6
South Dakota                     47,370      48.4              33.7
Tennessee                       331,390      31.0              24.7
Texas                         1,303,550      41.5              19.5
Utah                            147,120      28.3              14.6
Vermont                          37,550      54.9              28.0
Virginia                        365,760      26.6              20.8
Washington                      318,990      52.8              32.3
West Virginia                   110,200      53.9              51.1
Wisconsin                       294,440      31.6              14.1
Wyoming                          29,340      57.2              45.6

Medicaid waiver status
Income-based                  3,439,480      49.7              33.8
Postpartum/
  lost coverage               3,049,820      34.1              23.6
None                          9,906,750      39.5              27.4

State and                    No. in need,    % served, 1994
waiver                       1995 *          All publicly      Title X-
status                                       funded            funded
                                             clinics           clinics

U.S. total                   16,512,850      39.4              25.2
Alabama                         278,510      42.5              32.1
Alaska                           32,480      62.7              20.6
Arizona                         285,720      46.3              11.7
Arkansas                        156,590      52.8              46.9
California                    2,205,920      36.4              22.7
Colorado                        224,100      47.1              22.6
Connecticut                     165,640      55.9              30.1
Delaware                         39,080      53.4              37.8
D.C.                             41,430      61.9              35.1
Florida                         804,780      31.4              21.0
Georgia                         456,820      44.4              37.2
Hawaii                           59,210      32.9              29.5
Idaho                            69,750      49.7              42.4
Illinois                        701,090      30.2              23.2
Indiana                         363,650      39.6              21.4
Iowa                            166,630      55.0              44.5
Kansas                          155,260      45.1              30.7
Kentucky                        247,150      50.2              46.3
Louisiana                       314,000      25.4              18.6
Maine                            83,550      49.0              42.5
Maryland                        257,430      41.1              28.1
Massachusetts                   356,320      36.9              19.8
Michigan                        599,680      39.9              21.2
Minnesota                       255,870      39.6              14.3
Mississippi                     193,330      62.6              40.8
Missouri                        338,630      48.4              27.6
Montana                          52,620      68.0              53.9
Nebraska                        100,150      30.3              27.1
Nevada                           89,620      37.9              19.4
New Hampshire                    64,870      54.0              48.9
New Jersey                      413,420      34.1              24.7
New Mexico                      126,230      50.8              31.8
New York                      1,199,410      36.6              19.8
North Carolina                  445,980      38.3              25.3
North Dakota                     40,300      42.9              35.4
Ohio                            690,270      30.8              20.5
Oklahoma                        209,450      37.6              25.6
Oregon                          187,040      38.8              18.8
Pennsylvania                    747,280      41.0              35.1
Rhode Island                     63,350      33.3              20.8
South Carolina                  246,980      34.5              26.6
South Dakota                     47,260      48.2              36.1
Tennessee                       336,410      39.2              30.3
Texas                         1,290,080      37.4              18.1
Utah                            127,900      25.7              12.1
Vermont                          39,960      52.8              23.1
Virginia                        386,690      35.0              20.5
Washington                      315,200      48.1              28.0
West Virginia                   116,190      63.4              61.0
Wisconsin                       296,390      50.9              26.7
Wyoming                          27,180      47.6              40.8

Medicaid waiver status
Income-based                  3,516,470      39.2              25.4
Postpartum/
  lost coverage               3,051,750      38.0              21.2
None                          9,944,630      39.8              26.3

State and                    % change, 1994-2001
waiver                       All publicly    Title X-
status                       funded          funded
                             clinics         clinics

U.S. total                     3.3            11.4
Alabama                       -3.3             6.6
Alaska                        21.4            57.4
Arizona                      -30.8            27.3
Arkansas                      -0.8            -7.5
California                    31.9            40.2
Colorado                      23.2            11.4
Connecticut                  -21.7            -2.1
Delaware                      -2.9            36.9
D.C.                         -25.1            -0.6
Florida                       -0.1            10.9
Georgia                       -4.6             1.8
Hawaii                       -55.4           -50.2
Idaho                          4.5             8.8
Illinois                      -1.6            -4.0
Indiana                        4.0           -35.9
Iowa                         -25.3           -23.5
Kansas                       -18.8            -9.5
Kentucky                      10.6             2.1
Louisiana                      5.2            31.8
Maine                         27.3            -8.5
Maryland                     -17.9             4.6
Massachusetts                 12.5            11.2
Michigan                       4.3            57.0
Minnesota                      3.6            22.5
Mississippi                   -0.4            29.3
Missouri                     -34.5           -19.5
Montana                       -9.3            -2.8
Nebraska                      13.5            21.0
Nevada                        14.5            70.1
New Hampshire                 -9.7            -9.2
New Jersey                    -3.8             6.3
New Mexico                     5.9           -14.7
New York                       2.0            24.7
North Carolina                11.3            23.7
North Dakota                 -10.8            -5.8
Ohio                          -0.8             1.0
Oklahoma                      16.6            28.7
Oregon                        61.4            80.3
Pennsylvania                   0.2             4.7
Rhode Island                 -26.8            -0.7
South Carolina                64.8            86.3
South Dakota                   0.5            -6.7
Tennessee                    -20.8           -18.5
Texas                         10.8             7.7
Utah                          10.0            20.7
Vermont                        3.9            21.1
Virginia                     -24.2             1.5
Washington                     9.9            15.4
West Virginia                -15.0           -16.1
Wisconsin                    -37.9           -47.3
Wyoming                       20.1            11.9

Medicaid waiver status
Income-based                  26.7            33.2
Postpartum/
  lost coverage              -10.2            11.6
None                          -0.7             4.3

* Women aged 20-44 who are at risk of an unintended pregnancy and whose
income is less than 250% of the federal poverty level, plus all women
younger than 20 who are at risk of an unintended pregnancy. Sources:
Number of women in need, 2000--AGI, 2000 (reference 17). Number of
women in need, 1995--AGI,1997 (reference 17).

TABLE 6. Number of counties, percentage with any publicly funded family
Planning clinic and with any Title X-funded clinic, and percentage of
women in need of publicly funded family planning services living in
counties with any publicly funded or Title X-funded clinics, all by
state, 2001

State              No. of               % of counties
                   counties
                                        [greater than     [greater than
                                        or equal to]      or equal to]
                                        publicly          Title X-
                                        funded clinic     funded clinic

U.S. total         3,141                 84.5              73.4
Alabama               67                 98.5              98.5
Alaska                27                 85.2              37.0
Arizona               15                100.0              73.3
Arkansas              75                100.0             100.0
California            58                100.0              65.5
Colorado              63                 84.1              71.4
Connecticut            8                100.0              87.5
Delaware               3                100.0             100.0
D.C.                   1                100.0             100.0
Florida               67                100.0             100.0
Georgia              159                100.0             100.0
Hawaii                 5                 80.0              80.0
Idaho                 44                 88.6              84.1
Illinois             102                 69.6              62.7
Indiana               92                 48.9              27.2
Iowa                  99                 49.5              48.5
Kansas               105                 76.2              73.3
Kentucky             120                100.0             100.0
Louisiana             64                 98.4              98.4
Maine                 16                100.0              93.8
Maryland              24                100.0             100.0
Massachusetts         14                100.0             100.0
Michigan              83                 97.6              96.4
Minnesota             87                 81.6              34.5
Mississippi           82                 98.8              98.8
Missouri             115                 92.2              62.6
Montana               56                 58.9              50.0
Nebraska              93                 24.7              20.4
Nevada                17                 88.2              82.4
New Hampshire         10                100.0             100.0
New Jersey            21                100.0             100.0
New Mexico            33                 97.0              93.9
New York              62                100.0              98.4
North Carolina       100                100.0              99.0
North Dakota          53                 37.7              32.1
Ohio                  88                 89.8              72.7
Oklahoma              77                 89.6              89.6
Oregon                36                100.0              97.2
Pennsylvania          67                 94.0              94.0
Rhode Island           5                 80.0              80.0
South Carolina        46                100.0             100.0
South Dakota          66                 69.7              56.1
Tennessee             95                100.0             100.0
Texas                254                 68.1              39.8
Utah                  29                 79.3              44.8
Vermont               14                 92.9              71.4
Virginia             135                 88.1              85.9
Washington            39                 89.7              79.5
West Virginia         55                100.0              96.4
Wisconsin             72                 93.1              20.8
Wyoming               23                100.0              73.9

State              % of women in
                   need living in
                   counties
                   [greater than        [greater than
                   or equal to]         or equal to]
                   publicly             Title X-
                   funded clinic        funded clinic

U.S. total          97.9                 93.8
Alabama             99.5                 99.5
Alaska              98.0                 66.6
Arizona            100.0                 95.9
Arkansas           100.0                100.0
California         100.0                 97.4
Colorado            99.4                 98.0
Connecticut        100.0                 95.4
Delaware           100.0                100.0
D.C.               100.0                100.0
Florida            100.0                100.0
Georgia            100.0                100.0
Hawaii             100.0                100.0
Idaho               96.9                 95.7
Illinois            96.0                 93.2
Indiana             82.0                 66.9
Iowa                82.1                 81.0
Kansas              95.2                 94.2
Kentucky           100.0                100.0
Louisiana           99.5                 99.5
Maine              100.0                 97.5
Maryland           100.0                100.0
Massachusetts      100.0                100.0
Michigan            99.8                 99.7
Minnesota           95.1                 65.5
Mississippi         99.9                 99.9
Missouri            98.7                 86.5
Montana             93.1                 87.8
Nebraska            72.8                 70.7
Nevada              99.8                 99.8
New Hampshire      100.0                100.0
New Jersey         100.0                100.0
New Mexico          99.9                 99.8
New York           100.0                 99.8
North Carolina     100.0                 93.1
North Dakota        82.4                 77.5
Ohio                98.1                 91.8
Oklahoma            99.0                 99.0
Oregon             100.0                100.0
Pennsylvania        99.4                 99.4
Rhode Island        96.2                 96.2
South Carolina     100.0                100.0
South Dakota        89.7                 82.0
Tennessee          100.0                100.0
Texas               96.6                 87.5
Utah                98.2                 82.9
Vermont             99.0                 58.8
Virginia            82.3                 80.4
Washington          98.9                 97.2
West Virginia      100.0                 98.8
Wisconsin           97.3                 56.1
Wyoming            100.0                 92.9


Acknowledgement

The authors thank Susheela Singh For the fictional global crime syndicate, see .
Singh is a Sanskrit word meaning "lion". It is used as a common surname and middle name in North India by many communities, especially by the Sikhs and the Rajputs.
 and Lawrence Lawrence.

1 City (1990 pop. 26,763), Marion co., central Ind., a residential suburb of Indianapolis, on the West Fork of the White River. It has light manufacturing.

2 City (1990 pop. 65,608), seat of Douglas co., NE Kans.
 Finer for comments on earlier versions of this article, and Sarah Kirshen, Emily Stone This article is about freelance journalist Emily Stone. For the illustrator, see Em Stone. For the actor, see Emma Stone. For the blogger, see Emily Stone (chocolate). , Claire n. 1. A small inclosed pond used for gathering and greening oysters.  Evans Ev·ans , Herbert McLean 1882-1971.

American anatomist who isolated four pituitary hormones and discovered vitamin E (1922).
 and Sumitra Sumitra (Sanskrit: सुमित्रा, sumitrā), in the Hindu epic Ramayana, was the second of King Dasaratha's three wives and a queen of Ayodhya. She was the mother of twins Lakshmana and Shatrughna.  Mattai Mattai may refer to:
  • Mar Mattai Monastery, the traditional see of the Orthodox maphrian in Bartella
  • Mattai of Arbela, av beit din of the Sanhedrin under the nasi Joshua ben Perachyah at the time of John Hyrcanus
See also
  • Matthew (name)
 for assistance with data collection, follow-up follow-up,
n the process of monitoring the progress of a patient after a period of active treatment.


follow-up

subsequent.


follow-up plan
 and data processing data processing or information processing, operations (e.g., handling, merging, sorting, and computing) performed upon data in accordance with strictly defined procedures, such as recording and summarizing the financial transactions of a . The research on which this article is based was supported by the Office of Population Affairs, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979
Health and Human Services, HHS
 (DHHS DHHS Department of Health & Human Services (US government)
DHHS Dana Hills High School (Dana Point, California)
DHHS Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services
DHHS Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services
), grant FPR FPR Ford Performance Racing
FPR Front Patriotique Rwandais (Rwanda Patriotic Front)
FPR Floating-Point Register (CPU architecture)
FPR Fuel Pressure Regulator (automotive) 
 000072. The conclusions and opinions expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of DHHS.

* We define family planning agencies as organizations that have operating responsibility for clinics that provide contraceptive services. In this study, we included only clinics that offer contraceptive services to the general public and provide these services free of charge or at a reduced fee to at least some clients. We excluded private physician practices and health care centers serving only restricted populations, such as health maintenance organization enrollees, students, and veterans and military personnel. We included sites that provide education and counseling and dispense dispense /dis·pense/ (-pens´) to prepare medicines for and distribute them to their users.

dis·pense
v.
To prepare and give out medicines.
 only non medical contraceptive methods if they maintain charts for contraceptive clients.

* Estimates for the number of women in need of publicly subsidized contraceptive services in each state in 2002 are now available, but these data were not completed in time to be included in this article. However, use of the 2002 estimates do not change any of the results presented here. County-level data off the numbers of women in need and clinics and clients served are available at <http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/win/index>.

* Oregon and South Carolina had the largest increases (63-70%), followed by California (27%). Because California has the largest Medicaid waiver program, comprising more than half of all contraceptive clients served in states with income-based waiver programs, we also estimated the change excluding California. The result (a 21% increase) was similar to the estimate for all seven states.

REFERENCES

(1.) Frost JJ, Public or private providers? U.S. women's use of reproductive health services, Family Planning Perspectives, 2001, 33(1):4-12.

(2.) Finer LB, Darroch JE and Frost JJ, U.S. agencies providing publicly funded contraceptive services in 1999, Perspectives an Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2002, 34(1):15-24.

(3.) Ibid.

(4.) Gold RB, Doing more for less: study says state Medicaid family planning expansions are cost-effective cost-effective,
n the minimal expenditure of dollars, time, and other elements necessary to achieve the health care result deemed necessary and appropriate.
, Guttmacher Report on Public Policy, 2004, 7(1): 1-2.

(5.) Finer LB, Darroch JE and Frost JJ, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 2).

(6.) The Alan Guttmacher Alan Frank Guttmacher (1898-1974) was an American physician.

He served as president of Planned Parenthood and vice-president of the American Eugenics Society, founded the Association for the Study of Abortion in 1964, was a member of the Association for Voluntary
 Institute (AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) A machine intelligence that resembles that of a human being. Considered impossible by many, most artificial intelligence (AI) research, projects and products deal with specific applications such as industrial robots, playing chess, ), Fulfilling the Promise: Public Policy and U.S. Family Planning Clinics, New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: AGI, 2000.

(7.) Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Program guidelines guidelines,
n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks.
 for project grants for family planning services, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2001.

(8.) AGI, 2000, op. cit. (see reference 6)

(9.) Gold RB, Nowhere but up: rising coats for Title X clinics, Guttmacher Report on Public Policy, 2002, 5(5):6-9.

(10.) Gold RB, States eye Medicaid cure as cure for fiscal woes, Guttmacher Report on Public Policy, 2003, 6(3):6-9.

(11.) Gold RB, Medicaid family planning expansions hit stride, Guttmacher Report on Public Policy, 2003, 6(4):11-14; and The Henry J. Kaiser Henry John Kaiser (May 9, 1882—August 24, 1967) was an American industrialist who became known as the father of modern American shipbuilding. Early life
Beginning as a cashier in a dry-goods shop in Utica, New York, Kaiser moved many times as he pursued the
 Family Foundation and AGI, Medicaid: a critical source of support for family planning in the United States, Issue Brief, New York: The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and AGI, 2004.

(12.) Frost, JJ, Family planning clinic services in the United States, 1994, Family Planning Perspectives, 1996, 28(3):92-100; and Frost JJ et al., Family planning clinic services in the United States: patterns and trends in the late 1990s, Family Planning Perspectives, 2001, 33(3): 113-122.

(13.) Frost JJ, Frohwirth L and Purcell Pur·cell   , Henry 1659?-1695.

English composer and the leading musical figure of the baroque style in England.

Noun 1. Purcell - English organist at Westminster Abbey and composer of many theatrical pieces (1659-1695)
 A, Expanded methodology for the 2001 census census, periodic official count of the number of persons and their condition and of the resources of a country. In ancient times, among the Jews and Romans, such enumeration was mainly for taxation and conscription purposes.  of publicly funded family planning clinics, AGI, 2004, <http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/win/clinicmethods2001.pdf>

(14.) Office of Population Affairs, DHHS, Family Planning Grantees, Delegates, and Clinics: 2001/2002 Directory, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2001.

(15.) Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA PPFA Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. (since 1916; New York City, NY, USA)
PPFA Professional Picture Framers Association
PPFA Page Printer Formatting Aid (IBM) 
), Directory of Service Providers, 2000, New York: PPFA, 2000.

(16.) Health Resources and Services Administration The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) is an agency within the United States Department of Health and Human Services whose goal is to improve access to health care for those without insurance. , DHHS, Bureau of Primary Care Programs Directory: 2001, Bethesda Bethesda, city, United States
Bethesda, uninc. city (1990 pop. 62,936), Montgomery co., W central Md., an affluent residential and commercial suburb of Washington, D.C. The area was settled in the late 17th cent.
, MD: DHHS, 2000.

(17.) AGI, Contraceptive Needs and Services, 1995, New York: AGI, 1997; and AGI, Women in need of contraceptive services and supplies, 2000, <http://www.gutimacher.org/pubs/win/index>, accessed Aug. 27, 2004.

(18.) Frost JJ et al., 2001, op. cit. (see reference 12).

(19.) Finer LB, Darroch JE and Frost JJ, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 2).

(20.) Ibid.

(21.) Gold RB, 2004, op. cit. (see reference 4).

(22.) Gold RB, 2002, op. cit. (see reference 9).

Jennifer Jennifer became a common first name for females in English-speaking countries during the 20th century. The name Jennifer is a Cornish variant of Guinevere, deriving ultimately from Proto-Celtic *windo-seibaro- "white ghost", via Brythonic *wino-hibirā (cf.  J. Frost is senior research associate, Loci Frohwirth is research associate and Alison Alison

betrays old husband amusingly with her lodger, Nicholas. [Br. Lit.: Canterbury Tales, “Miller’s Tale”]

See : Adultery
 Purcell is research assistant, all with The Alan Guttmacher Institute, New York.

jfrost@guttmacher.org See .org.

(networking) org - The top-level domain for organisations or individuals that don't fit any other top-level domain (national, com, edu, or gov). Though many have .org domains, it was never intended to be limited to non-profit organisations.

RFC 1591.
 
COPYRIGHT 2004 The Alan Guttmacher Institute
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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