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Reproductive coercion: What happens when your partner overrules your pregnancy choice?

Reproductive coercion: What happens when your partner overrules your pregnancy choice? By The Washington Post By Eva Glicksman Sometimes he could be abusive, but the man she lived with had always honoured her wish to use birth control. One night, though, he didn t. The Los Angeles woman, then 22, tried to get Plan B, the morning-after pill, but was refused at the clinic because she owed money to the state medical system. And she was pregnant. Considering abortion made her feel guilty. Her boyfriend made it worse: What kind of human being are you? he taunted. Elizabeth Miller, director of adolescent and young adult medicine at the UPMC Children s Hospital of Pittsburgh, was the first to identify and study this form of domestic abuse she called reproductive coercion - when a man or a woman tries to overrule a partner s choice about a pregnancy.

Not what I consented to : When a partner tries to control the other s choice about pregnancy

Convalescent Plasma For COVID-19 Turns Out To Be A Bust : Shots

Embed iframe src https://www.npr.org/player/embed/975365309/975545537 width 100% height 290 frameborder 0 scrolling no title NPR embedded audio player RACHEL MARTIN, HOST: More than half-a-million Americans have gotten an experimental treatment for COVID-19. It s called convalescent plasma. But a year into the pandemic, it is not clear who, if anyone, actually benefits from it. And that highlights the challenges scientists have faced in studying COVID drugs. NPR science correspondent Richard Harris reports. RICHARD HARRIS, BYLINE: On paper, treatment with convalescent plasma makes good sense. The idea is to take blood plasma from people who have recovered from COVID-19 and infuse it into people currently infected. The antibodies in that plasma, in theory, would help fight the virus. So based on that idea, Dr. Nicole Bouvier at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York decided to give it a try last March.

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