Birth Control Research Essay

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    taken on the economy. Our birth rates climb and we our population gets bigger and bigger, giving us our biggest issue, overpopulation. Many believe that expanding our areas and cities are the answer to any overcrowding issues. The more we expand the more natural resources we use. We are rapidly losing our natural resources, for not just ourselves but for the others we care about around us. A solution to overpopulation could be birth control, and I do agree that birth control could even help us in more

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    Margaret Sanger, an active reproductive rights reformist and the mother of what we now know to be Planned Parenthood, grew up the sixth child of eleven in an Irish-American family in New York. Sanger witnessed her mother go through multiple miscarriages, leaving her concerned for her mother’s health. She later studied nursing at a variety of colleges. Sanger moved to New York City in the early twentieth century, taking her husband, William Sanger, and three children with her. Radical politics

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    Accessible Birth Control in the United States A total of 730,322 abortions were reported from the Centers for Disease Control in 2011. This could easily be resolved with proper usage of birth control. But the fact of the matter is that only 62% of women are actually using proper birth control, now this may seem like a lot of women, but there is 158.6 million women in the United States alone so 58.5 million are currently not on any birth control which is a huge amount of women. Birth control needs

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    inform of the impact of Margaret Sanger Thesis: Margaret Sanger changed the world by rallying for the availability and use of contraceptives for all women. I. Introduction A. Attention Getter: “No woman can call herself free who does not own and control her body. No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a mother.” –Margaret Sanger B. Relevance Statement: According to the CDC, 62% of women of reproductive age are currently using a contraceptive

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    In 1957 the FDA approved the first birth control pill, but only as a treatment for severe menstrual disorders not simply for contraceptive use. That same year an unusually high number of women report severe menstrual disorders to their doctor (Nikolchev, 2010). It seems fairly unlikely that this is just a coincidence. What is far more likely is that women were excited for the opportunity to be given the opportunity to decide for themselves if they wanted to become pregnant or not. For the first time

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    Women's Rights Of Women

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    Makenzie Holman Research Brief In the early 1900s, it was very uncommon for women to have access to contraceptives or health education. Then one day, a doctor and a nurse tended to a women at home who was suffering from having an abortion. Just like many women in the U.S. at this time, she was wanting to learn how to prevent pregnancies so she did not have to have any more abortions. As the doctor and nurse left this woman 's house, the women begged the doctor to teach her how she could prevent

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    The Rise Of Birth Control

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    population control is worth a hundred dollars invested in economic growth (Bailey, 2013).” The rise of contraception in the United States was controversial and highly debated in court. But, once the movement got rolling, it was hard to stop. When a Gallop Poll in 1936 asked if United States citizens favor the birth control movement, 61 percent answered yes. This was a shocking discovery, because until that time contraception seemed like a taboo topic. Today, the manufacturing and selling of birth control

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    the right to have control over their own bodies. Sanger’s journey began when her mother died from tuberculosis. Her mother had 11 children and seven miscarriages (“Our history”). After her mother passed, Sanger decided to study birth control. Giving out birth control and information about it was illegal during that time. Although Sangers goals were illegal she still had to fight for

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    I chose the article “TV as Birth Control” by Fred Pearce. It addressed the issue of population growth and India 's trend toward lower birth rates.When the decline in India 's population growth was studied by Stanford human geographer Martin Lewis, discovered that the arrival of cable TV was the biggest cause of the decline in birth rate. His research corroborated a 2009 study by Robert Jensen and Emily Oster, development economists from the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University

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    than that of the development of the birth control pill. While it was certainly not the catalyst for the liberation of all women, it opened up a world of opportunity for many who chose to take it. For my Simmons History Research Project, I chose to look into the availability of contraception at the school. In my initial search, I hoped to find out exactly when and exactly what forms of birth control were made available to students through the school. As my research progressed, I found that while the

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