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Family Planning clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Family Planning.

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NCT ID: NCT05838859 Recruiting - Contraception Clinical Trials

Contraception and Mental Health: Are we Doing Enough?

Start date: February 9, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The study seeks to determine current practices and perspectives of contraceptive advice of both service users and professionals. It aims to examine 1) the experiences of female service users of reproductive potential with mental health conditions of contraceptive advice from mental health professionals and 2) the current practice of providing contraceptive advice by mental health professionals.

NCT ID: NCT05056545 Recruiting - Family Planning Clinical Trials

Postpartum Family Planning Program in Rwanda

Start date: August 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This trial wants to address high unmet need for postpartum family planning (PPFP) in Rwanda. A previous pilot study tested the intervention (informed by formative work with couples/clients, clinic providers, champions, and community health workers), which significantly increased the use of PPFP in government clinics. This study now proposes to use an implementation science framework to test the hypothesis that the proposed PPFP intervention is adaptable to large-scale implementation, cost-effective, and sustainable. This PPFP could dramatically reduce unintended pregnancy and abortion and improve birth spacing and maternal and newborn health.

NCT ID: NCT04558229 Recruiting - Contraception Clinical Trials

RCT Evaluating Standardized Counseling on Early Discontinuation for Irregular Bleeding in Nexplanon Users

Start date: November 24, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Clinician counseling for implant users should involve an explanation of the likelihood of irregular bleeding and the possibility of continued or frequent bleeding throughout three years of use. If that counseling does not provide specifics of the actual distribution of bleeding patterns described in published literature, there remains the real possibility of biased or directed counseling, leading to an inaccurate and exaggerated expectation of potential bleeding changes. This study aims to evaluate if a standardized script accompanied by a visual aid regarding expected bleeding profiles, with intention to remove any possibility of negative or positive framing, could change users' expectations and satisfaction with their method, leading to lower discontinuation rates.