Washington, D.C. – More than half a million women around the world, including an estimated 50,000 in the United States, use natural family planning methods developed by Georgetown University Medical ...
What the infamous nasbandi of the 1970s and the subsequent family planning drives could not achieve, doctors in Delhi are now trying to accomplish through a simple colour-coded set of beads. Called ...
The Standard Days Method (TM), a new natural method of family planning, is more than 95% effective at preventing pregnancy, according to an international study conducted by Georgetown University ...
image: iCycleBeads, a scientifically-based family planning tool developed by researchers from Georgetown University’s Institute for Reproductive Health, is the first software application that enables ...
On April 15 the CycleBeads Conception Kit hit the market, a novel, scientifically-based tool to help women worldwide naturally plan pregnancy by monitoring their fertility. Victoria Jennings, PhD, ...
Family planning has gone digital with the recent release of Cycle Technologies’ iCycleBeads, an application for Apple products that allows women to track their menstrual cycles on their iPhones, iPods ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Heyer, a Harvard-educated social entrepreneur, recently launched a new app called Dot that helps women understand when pregnancy ...
Every morning when she wakes up, Becca, a college student in Pennsylvania, puts a teardrop-shaped thermometer called the Daysy under her tongue. If it lights up green, she knows that day she and her ...
It's simple, inexpensive and non-clinical. The country's largest condom manufacturer, HLL Lifecare Ltd (HLL), has now come out with a family planning method for women that just requires them to count ...
Automatic alerts will let a woman know if she is fertile or not. A scientifically-based family planning tool developed by researchers from Georgetown University's Institute for Reproductive Health, a ...
Every morning when she wakes up, Becca, a college student in Pennsylvania, puts a teardrop-shaped thermometer called the Daysy under her tongue. If it lights up green, she knows that day she and her ...