utility of these hormonal male contraceptive methods among Black men living on low incomes in Los Angeles, California cannot be fully realized until developers address and overcome historical and ongoing medical mistrust. To describe how a general-practitioner-delivered community medical abortion service is provided in Ireland, including a description of the unique model of care delivered within the framework of new legislation. To investigate the characteristics and contraceptive choices of women attending in the first six months of the service. Twenty-seven general practitioners conducted a retrospective chart review. We described the service and analyzed demographic characteristics, treatment outcomes, adverse events, and contraception use. We defined treatment success as complete abortion without surgical intervention. Twenty-seven general practitioners from the Southern Task Group on Abortion and Reproductive Topics (START) group collected data from 475 women who had attended requesting medical abortion from January 1st 2019 to June 30th 2019. Out of these, 315 (66%) were more than 25 years old, and 261 (55%) had at least one child. The mean gestational age at initial presentation was 49 days. Five (1%) had a gestatssible model of care is demonstrated. These findings can help inform legislative review, clinical guidelines, and generate hypotheses for future research. This review provides demographic, efficacy, and safety data for the general-practitioner-provided community medical abortion service in Ireland. An effective and largely accessible model of care is demonstrated. These findings can help inform legislative review, clinical guidelines, and generate hypotheses for future research. To assess how women's reproductive history, contraceptive experience and need of abortion care are associated with priorities for contraception. Design In this cross-sectional survey study, we gathered information on women's history of births and abortions, previous use and satisfaction with contraceptive methods, and features of contraceptive methods they value most. Women were recruited at public family planning and outpatient abortion clinics in the capital region of Helsinki, Finland. Of the 1006 women responding, 502 were recruited during visits for abortion care and 504 for contraceptive counseling. Women seeking abortion care more often had a history of abortion than women seeking contraceptive counseling (44% vs 11%), presented with a higher mean number of different contraceptive methods used (69% vs 55% with more than 2 previous methods), and were less often satisfied with the methods used (36% vs 60% satisfied with 2 out of 3 methods), p < 0.001 for all. In addition, women seeking abortion care had lower odds of prioritizing effectiveness (aOR 0.3, 95% CI 0.2-0.5), and higher odds of prioritizing lower hormonal levels or non-hormonal alternatives (aOR 2.0, 95% CI 1.3-3.2). There was no difference between the groups regarding priorities of lesser pelvic pain (aOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.5-1.1), regular period (aOR 01.2, 95% CI 0.8-1.9), or the method being easy to use (aOR 1.2, 95% CI 0.8-1.8). There is a contrast between guidelines emphasizing effectiveness in postabortion contraception, and many women's contraceptive priorities. Clinicians providing contraceptive counseling must be mindful of each individual's personal contraceptive priorities. Clinicians providing contraceptive counseling must be mindful of each individual's personal contraceptive priorities. To explore contraceptive decision making among recently pregnant patients with a history of opioid use disorder. We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews, based on principles of the Ottawa Decision Support Framework, with 20 recently pregnant individuals diagnosed with opioid use disorder at a tertiary care medical center in Massachusetts. We audio-recorded the interviews and they were transcribed verbatim. We analyzed our interview data using inductive and deductive coding. Participants value the availability of barrier methods as a means of preventing both sexually transmitted infections and pregnancy. For some participants, housing instability makes storing contraceptive methods and managing personal hygiene related to bleeding patterns difficult. For others, housing instability impacts their overall fertility goals. Side effects including weight gain, interactions with mood stabilizing medications, concern regarding post-operative opioids, or intrinsic aspects of a method that serve as reth opioid use disorder view their contraceptive decisions. To explore young men's perceived experience of coercive pregnancy behaviors by female partners, and engagement in and behavioral overlap of these occurrences in this sample. Heterosexually active young men aged 15 to 24 (n=39), recruited from 3 primary care and 2 sexually transmitted disease clinics in Baltimore, MD city over a 2-week period, were surveyed on their perceived experience of and engagement in coercive pregnancy behaviors, attitudes about women, and background characteristics. Of 130 invited, 66 (51%) agreed to participate, 39 of whom were heterosexual young men; 87% were non-Hispanic Black and 59% were aged 20 to 24. Eleven (28%) perceived one or more coercive pregnancy behaviors by a partner and nine (23%) engaged in one or more coercive behavior. Most (58%) agreed women are responsible for birth control decisions, but 55% believed women could not be trusted to tell the truth about contraceptive use and 68% believe women would like to get pregnant. Over one-third of young men in this satraceptive practices.DNA undergoes spontaneous point mutations, which are believed to be central to the evolution of the organisms and which are thought to occur by tautomerization of the canonical Guanine-Cytosine (G-C) base pair into non-canonical G∗-C∗ base pair via the double proton tunneling. In the present work, we close a gap in the literature by computing the time delay during the proton tunneling. https://www.selleckchem.com/Androgen-Receptor.html Our results, based on the well-known dwell time and our model of the entropic time, range from femtoseconds to picoseconds, and completely agree with the time scales of the structural changes in molecules (mutation processes not the complete replication processes). The tunneling delay times are thus nonnegligible and imply that the DNA mutations can be resolved using the attosecond laser technology, if not the femtosecond technology. Our results can be relevant also for other tunneling-enabled biological processes.