Bateman Childers (watergrouse8)

Empirical oophorectomy in patients with completed family size might confer additional benefit in preventing disease recurrence in resource limited settings where testing for estrogen and progesterone receptor status of the tumour is unavailable. Due to the unpredictable course of the disease, lifelong patient follow-up is critical for better outcomes.This study aimed at understanding how, when, and under what circumstances interventions succeed (or fail) to improve male involvement in maternal and child healthcare in Uganda. A realist synthesis approach was used to unpack the complexity of these health interventions to explain their theories and applications in specific circumstances. Our review of 19 studies revealed that men were specifically approached as clients, partners or agents for behavioural change. Broadly, mechanisms of education, training, restriction, environmental restructuring, modeling, enablement, persuasion, incentivization and coercion were used to involve men in maternal and child healthcare. Education, training, modeling, enablement and environmental restructuring mechanisms were more effective in 'cultivating' a sustained will of men to get involved as couples. However, unintended outcomes were inevitable in circumstances where mechanisms did not match specific contexts. Using coercion, restriction or incentivization is more likely to result in short-term and negative outcomes because of context heterogeneities.Miscarriage is a common adverse pregnancy outcome in childbearing and an increasing global reproductive health problem. This study explored 1) the national prevalence of the first trimester (≤12 weeks) miscarriage among women (15-49 years) in Ghana, and 2) the influence of first-trimester antenatal care (ANC) visits on miscarriage risk. A cross-sectional study using the Demographic Health Survey (DHS- 2017) on maternal health in Ghana was conducted. We used a nationally representative subsample of (7,846) women with no or early ANC visit of the initial sample (25,062). Women with late ANC visit (≥12 weeks) and those who were never pregnant or had not given birth at the time of the survey were excluded from this analysis. We performed multivariable Poisson regression to estimate miscarriage risk (RR), its associated risk factors, and national prevalence. The national first-trimester miscarriage prevalence was 19.1%. Increasing maternal age and urban residence were significantly associated with the risk of first- trimester miscarriage (p less then 0.001) while early ANC visits lower the risk of miscarriage by 43% (p=0.0246). We found that first trimester ANC visit decreases miscarriage risk in Ghana and highlights the important role of early ANC visits in reducing miscarriages.This study evaluated pregnancy results after fresh and frozen embryo transfer in males with infertility due to non-obstructive azoospermia and oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. In this retrospective study, a total of 801 embryo transfer cycles were followed up, including 423 fresh embryo transfers and 378 frozen embryo transfers in which intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) was performed because of male infertility. This study included females aged 28-38 years without uterine, endometrial, ovarian and tubal abnormalities and with regular menstrual cycles (n=801), and males aged 28-38 years with non-obstructive azoospermia and oligoasthenoteratozoospermia. Descriptive statistical methods and the independent t-test were used in the comparison of two groups with normal distribution, the Mann-Whitney U test was used in the comparison of two groups without normal distribution, and the Chi-square test was used to compare categorical variables. There were no statistically significant differences between the fresh embryo transfer group and frozen embryo transfer group in terms of rates of pregnancy, biochemical pregnancy, clinical pregnancy, live birth rate, and abortion rate. There was no difference between fresh embryo transfer and