Today there are more women using modern contraception than ever before.
Yet, on these grounds alone, not one of the widely-touted types of modern contraception would be acceptable.
In the 1970s and 1980s, approximately 12 percent of sexually active women in Serbia used modern contraception such as condoms.
Less than half the women have attended school and fewer than one in 10 use modern contraception.
More than 215 million women who wish to protect themselves from unintended and potentially unsafe pregnancy do not have access to modern contraception.
In Africa, 53% of women of reproductive age have an unmet need for modern contraception.
Then-no, there wasn't so much as a "Monday morning" pill in the ship, much less modern contraception.
More than 200 million women in developing countries want to avoid pregnancy, but need modern contraception.
Sexually active unmarried women have a higher contraceptive use around 50%, 14% of which is modern contraception.
While modern contraception makes it easier for Kenyans to limit family size, they have not responded.