Editorial
1 Julia Hussein, Laura Ferguson
Eliminating stigma and discrimination in sexual and reproductive health care: a public health imperative
Review article
6 Pauline Cullen, Elżbieta Korolczuk
Challenging abortion stigma: framing abortion in Ireland and Poland
Research articles
20 Ulrika Rehnström Loi, Beatrice Otieno, Monica Oguttu, Kristina Gemzell-Danielsson, Marie Klingberg-Allvin, Elisabeth Faxelid, Marlene Makenzius
Abortion and contraceptive use stigma: a cross-sectional study of attitudes and beliefs in secondary school students in western Kenya
32 Tricia Ong, David Mellor, Sabrina Chettri
Multiplicity of stigma: the experiences, fears and knowledge of young trafficked women in Nepal
Correction to: Multiplicity of stigma: the experiences, fears and knowledge of young trafficked women in Nepal
50 Shelly Makleff, Rebecca Wilkins, Hadassah Wachsmann, Deepesh Gupta, Muthoni Wachira, Wilson Bunde, Usha Radhakrishnan, Beniamino Cislaghi, Sarah E Baum
Exploring stigma and social norms in women's abortion experiences and their expectations of care
65 Sandra Salomé Fernández Vázquez, Josefina Brown
From stigma to pride: health professionals and abortion policies in the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires
75 Meghan Seewald, Lisa A Martin, Lina Echeverri, Jesse Njunguru, Jane A Hassinger, Lisa H Harris
Stigma and abortion complications: stories from three continents
86 Carmen H Logie, Moses Okumu, Simon P Mwima, Peter Kyambadde, Robert Hakiza, Irungu Peter Kibathi, Emmanuel Kironde, Joshua Musinguzi, Claire Uwase Kipenda
Exploring associations between adolescent sexual and reproductive health stigma and HIV testing awareness and uptake among urban refugee and displaced youth in Kampala, Uganda
107 Dulce Ferraz, Marcia Thereza Couto, Eliana Miura Zucchi, Gabriela Junqueira Calazans, Lorruan Alves dos Santos, Augusto Mathias, Alexandre Grangeiro
AIDS- and sexuality-related stigmas underlying the use of post-exposure prophylaxis for HIV in Brazil: findings from a multicentric study
Perspective
122 Clare Murphy, Verity Pooke
Emergency contraception in the UK: stigma as a key ingredient of a fundamental women's healthcare product
Bookshelf
126 Olivia Engle
From a Whisper to a Shout: Abortion Activism and Social Media. By Elizabeth Arveda Kissling
Editor-in-Chief: Julia Hussein
Chief Executive: Eszter Kismödi
Managing Editor: Pete Chapman, Sarah Pugh
Monitoring Editor: Pathika Martin
Communications Manager: Jessica MacKinnon
Communications Officer: Alexane Bremshey
Finance Manager: Elisabeta Pashaj, Lance Stewart
Operations Manager: Edna Epelu
Associate Editors: Laura Ferguson, Nambusi Kyegombe, Emma Pitchforth, Mindy Jane Roseman, Nina Sun, Joyce Wamoyi
Peer reviewers:
Renu Addlakha, Sylvia Avon, Pierre Waldemar Brouard, Catherine Cansino, Roosbelinda Cardenas, Brenda Chizana, Kalysha Closson, Diane Cooper, Sarah Cowan, Laura Ferguson, Rebecca Fish, Dennis Francis, Jewel Gausman, Rakhi Ghoshal, Lesley Hoggart, Fauzia Huda, Alexandrina Iovita, Derina Johnson, Heidi Bart Johnston, Gary Jones, John Kingsley Krugu, Elmien Lesch, Carmen H Logie, Lucy Wangui Maina, Pam Lowe, Lucy Minayo, Suraya Mohamed, Simone Monteiro, Benita Moolman, Oliver Mweemba, Erica Marie Nelson, Theresa Ngoshe Nkole, Kathryn S Oths , Sara Parker, Susan Patterson, Erin Pearson, Mario Pecheny, Melisa Pamela Quispe-Ilanzo, Sarah Rominski, Michelle Sadler, Udo Schuklenk, Meghan Seewald, Arianne Shahvisi, Holly Donahue Singh, Edwin Van Teijlingen, Leela Visaria, Joyce Wamoyi, Jane Wilbur, Elspeth Wilson
Funding
SRHM’s work in 2019 has been supported by the Open Society Foundation and the Women's Refugee Commission.
Authors are responsible for the content of their articles which do not necessarily reflect positions or policies of the funders.
Cover photo: A young woman waiting in front of a consultation room in a hospital in Nasir, run by MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières). On the door it says “Free condoms are available here”. With the return of people from refugee camps in neighbouring countries, new health problems and diseases like HIV and AIDS have been introduced into local communities. International NGOs are trying to fight a looming health crisis in large parts of inaccessible South Sudan by raising awareness, distributing condoms and trying to change sexual behaviour.© Sven Torfinn / Panos
Translation:
Françoise de Luca-Lacoste translated abstracts from English to French and Lisette Silva translated abstracts from English to Spanish.
Copyright © 2019
Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters. This is an Open Access journal distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/4.0/), which allows for sharing and adapting the work for any purpose, even commercially, provided appropriate credit is given with a link to the originally published item, a reference to the author(s) and links to their homepages, reference to the license under which the article is published and a link to this, as well as an indication of any changes that have been made to the original.
ISSN (Online) 2641-0397
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