Study Finds Sterilization Rates Rose Post-Dobbs Decision

More young people are seeking and following through with permanent contraception procedures.

A new study found that rates of young people seeking permanent contraception have risen since the overturn of Roe v Wade. 

The study evaluated changes in rates of tubal ligation and vasectomy procedures among adults aged 18 to 30 following the Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

The Supreme Court overturned Roe in June of 2022, and West Virginia lawmakers convened a special session in September of that year in which they passed the state’s near-total abortion ban or the Unborn Child Protection Act.

The Unborn Child Protection Act, also known as House Bill 302, outlaws abortions in West Virginia except in cases when the mother’s life is in danger, or instances of rape and incest that are reported to law enforcement in a timely manner. Any abortion performed must be done so in a hospital within eight weeks for adults and 14 weeks for minors.

In a written statement, Kristin Sinning, Marshall Health obstetrician-gynecologist and professor at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, confirmed an increase in patients expressing interest in and proceeding with permanent sterilization within the past two years.

“Marshall Obstetrics and Gynecology offers patients a comprehensive range of contraception methods including permanent sterilization procedures,” Sinning wrote. “During the past two years, our clinics have experienced an increase in patients expressing interest in and proceeding with permanent sterilization. This is consistent with the findings outlined in the recent Journal of American Medicine Association article.”

Jacqueline Allison is an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Health Policy and Management and one of the authors of the study on rates of permanent contraception. She said the study was inspired by the conversations she had with friends and family following the overturning of Roe v Wade.

“I think a lot of people who with the capacity for pregnancy, including myself, felt a lot of fear and anxiety around the ruling,” Allison said. “And that fear and anxiety, as we saw in our study, translated to changes in contraceptive decision-making.”

Allison said the study found a substantial increase in both tubal ligation and vasectomy procedures among young people since the Dobbs decision. 

“We also found that this increase in tubal ligation procedures was twice that of the vasectomies,” Allison said. “It was also the increase was also sustained in the post Dobbs period, whereas for vasectomies, there was sort of an initial uptick, and then the rate leveled off.”

There could be multiple reasons for those rates, but Allison suspects people who can get pregnant are more likely to experience the consequences of not being able to terminate an unwanted or unsafe pregnancy. 

“Women disproportionately experience the health, social and economic consequences of abortion bans, whereas men may not experience those consequences as directly,” Allison said.

Another factor could be that men might not have health insurance coverage for a vasectomy. Allison explained that under the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate, all private payers are required to cover contraceptives, at no additional cost to patients. 

“That mandate did not include the vasectomy,” Allison said. “So it’s also possible that men do not have insurance coverage for vasectomy, whereas women do have coverage for tubal ligation.”

Allison said she expected to see an increase in interest and follow through with permanent contraception procedures following the Dobbs decision, but did not expect the increase to be as pronounced as it was. She was also surprised to learn that younger people were already more interested in the procedures than their older counterparts were at their ages.

“Even before the Dobbs ruling, younger people were more likely to go out and get permanent contraception, or they were there, the rate was increasing, rather,” Allison said. “And that’s opposite, that’s not what we see when we look at like all adults or older adults. So it suggest to me that, you know, young people are increasingly choosing this option, even before Dobbs.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Understanding How Babies Sleep

Sleep is a key part of both mental and physical health for everyone. But for many parents, ensuring their baby is getting good sleep can be frustrating and elusive. In the latest installment of our new series “Now What? A Series On Parenting,” we speak with an expert about infant sleep.

Sleep is a key part of both mental and physical health for everyone. But for many parents, ensuring their baby is getting good sleep can be frustrating and elusive.

In the latest installment of our new series “Now What? A Series On Parenting,” reporter Chris Schulz speaks with Dr. Paul Knowles, a Marshall Health neurologist and assistant professor at Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, about infant sleep.

This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

Dr. Paul Knowles, Marshall Health neurologist and assistant professor at Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine.

Courtesy of Marshall Health

Schulz: Why is sleep so important for everyone?

Knowles: We are built to spend a third of our time alive asleep, a third or more. And unfortunately, as a culture, we have de-emphasized the need for sleep. Everybody’s like, “Well, I have all these things to do.” And the thing that typically gets whittled away is sleep. But sleep is important because it restores you physically and also restores you mentally. 

There are a number of studies that show that sleep is probably important in learning, that people who study for a test and then get a good night’s sleep are much more likely to recall all the facts and do better on the test than somebody who stays up all night and crams. There’s lots of theories and questions, and we certainly don’t fully understand exactly what it does. What purpose does dreaming serve? Some people feel it’s your way to work through emotions and things. It’s clear that sleep serves a major restorative function. But in addition to that, it’s important in learning, how we’re organizing your brain in your mind and things like that.

Schulz: Can you tell me a little bit about why infant and child sleep is different from adult sleep?

Knowles: Anybody who’s had a baby knows it’s different. Particularly newborns don’t sleep like the rest of us. As an older child or an adult, you go through sleeping, you move into the lighter stages of sleep and eventually get to deeper stages of sleep and then into REM sleep or dream sleep. Newborns move immediately into REM sleep. Their neurological systems are not mature enough that they have prolonged sleep the way we do. 

Most “normal people” sleep eight hours at night, seven to nine hours at night as sort of a single block and that’s our sleep for the day. Infants sleep 16, 17 hours a day, but rarely more than a couple hours at a time. Sometimes they’ll nap and only be five, 10, 15 minutes, and sometimes they’ll nap and it’ll be four hours. The typical newborns have like seven or eight cycles through the day of wake and sleep. They sleep in little, little cat naps through the 24 hour cycle, rather than one single long-term block of sleep that you do as an adult. That matures over the first three to six months. Usually by three to four months, they’re starting to sleep the majority of the night. You get a good five or six hour block where you get sleep, and usually by six or seven months, they’re basically sleeping through the night. 

Of course, one of the major issues is, the babies never read the texts. You have lots of families who come in and complain that their one-year-old still isn’t sleeping through the night. I had a colleague of mine years ago, we were complimenting him on how nice his teenager was, and he says, “The last time the boy did anything right was he slept through the night two weeks after he was born.” So there’s wide individual variation, but you can’t really expect a newborn. Some parents get frustrated when their two-month-old isn’t sleeping through the night yet. And it’s because physiologically, they’re just not there yet. Their systems haven’t matured to the point where they can sustain sleep for that long.

Schulz: Is there anything that parents can do to help that process along, or is it just a question of waiting?

Knowles: I mean, there’s a little bit but to some degree, you have to wait for the baby to mature. It’s the same thing as, the baby can’t walk until the baby has the strength and the coordination to put the muscles together and perform the action. It’s the same thing. You’re not going to be able to train your one month old to sleep through the night. You might be one of the lucky ones where the baby really does, at an early age, get a bigger block, and you get more consolidated sleep yourself. But most parents learn to sort of sleep when the baby does, and their sleep is more disruptive than we’re used to, and we don’t feel as good. But again, over three or four months, you start to get longer blocks. 

I think the parents, particularly as the child gets to be older, keeping a good routine really helps to consolidate that. I see parents and unfortunately, again, it’s a part of our culture – and this is talking typically a little bit more about the older kids – where the kids over the course of the week may sleep in three different places. They may spend a couple of days with the grandparents, a couple of days with mom, a couple of days with dad if mom and dad are separated, divorced. And everybody has a different schedule. Then they’re complaining that their children are having sleep issues. Well, part of that is because grandma’s trying to get them to sleep at 7 p.m., and mom’s letting them stay up to 10 p.m. And dad doesn’t care if they want to stay up and play video games to 1 a.m., he’s fine with that. So they have a different schedule everywhere they go and they’re having problems training their body what their routine should be.

Schulz: Does the space itself also contribute? Because I know especially for infants, there’s a lot of discussion about when to move them out of the bassinet and into the crib into a different room, etc. Does that have an influence on children generally, as much as having a regular schedule and routine does?

Knowles: I think probably the routine is a little bit more important. Obviously, you want a comfortable space. As a culture, we tend to discourage, you know, co-sleeping where the baby’s actually in the bed with you. My big issue actually with them having them in the same room is it’s very convenient for mom and dad, but sometimes mom and dad are disrupting the kids’ sleep. If somebody is a loud snorer, or has something like sleep apnea and is making loud noises and they’re disrupting the child’s sleep. So that becomes a component of trying to get them to sleep through the night, if their parents are actually contributing to the disruption.

Schulz: Sleep training, is there an evidence base to support this approach to encouraging independent sleep? What can you tell me about this process?

Knowles: There are several different mechanisms that are talked about. Perhaps one of the most well known is their Ferber method. Dr. Ferber wrote a kind of textbook, but it’s really actually written for the parent. It’s gone through multiple editions and I’ll be honest, I don’t know when he first wrote it. It was the ’70s or ’80s. He talks about methods to try and help train your child to go to sleep without you, to be able to put them down. Let them get used to the bed, let them self-soothe.

He talks about if they wake up and they’re fussy, you don’t go in and you don’t console them, you go and check on them and maybe briefly console if they’re really ramping up, but then you leave before they’re asleep so they eventually learn that they’re going to have to fall asleep in bed themselves. There are some studies showing that these sort of mechanisms work. And there’s several somewhat variable ways to do it, but people talk about Ferber-ising the bedroom routine, and his is probably one of the most famous ways to do it.

Schulz: So would you say that push back in recent years has more to do with parents and other caregivers, just not really being able to tough out that period of adjustment where the baby is expressing its displeasure?

Knowles: Each individual case is different and sometimes, there may be other issues going on. I think a lot of times it is difficult for the parents learning, too. And I’ll be honest with you, when my kids were little, and I’m in my 60s now, but when I had little kids, my first one, my wife fussed at me because the baby started crying, I started getting out of bed, she says, “Just leave her.” And I said “She’s crying.” She says, “Just leave her.” And sure enough, you know, five minutes later, she fussed for a couple minutes then rolled over and fell back asleep and I didn’t have to get up.

But you know, the baby had trained me. When she was little, she fussed, because she was either wet or she needed to feed. So I was sort of trained, “Oh, she starts to fuss, she needs something changed or something done.” My wife was the one to say, “Better let her soothe herself if she will.” 

Schulz: It’s always reassuring to hear an expert say that they go through the same issues as everybody else. 

Knowles: Oh, yeah. It’s always different when it’s your kid. As somebody who trained in pediatrics, you learn that at a relatively young stage, it’s one thing to sit there and tell the parent, “This is what you got to do.” Then when you’re living through it yourself, it’s trying to remember what you tell everybody what to do, sometimes it’s hard.

Schulz: I wanted to jump back to a statement that you made earlier on in our conversation. It always fascinates me, I spoke to a pediatrician a few weeks ago who told me that the way she looks at it is the first three months of a baby’s life is basically the fourth trimester because their neurology and their brains are so underdeveloped, and then they still need that time to finish the work that was started in the womb. Does that bear true for you in your work with infants and what you’ve seen over the years?

Knowles: I think that that absolutely is true. In the first three or four months, it’s really obvious. Obviously our brains are changing for much longer than that. We make new neuronal connections well into adolescence. Our brain grows and changes over the years, but particularly the first year. 

The easiest example of that is white matter. It’s called white because of the presence of what we call myelin, which is the sheath around the nerves, that not only protects the nerves, but also actually impacts the functions of the nerves. Myelinated nerves tend to send impulses faster than unmyelinated nerves, and not all nerves are myelinated. But if you do an MRI on a newborn, there is very little myelin in the brain, there’s only a couple places. And then if you do repetitive MRIs up to about a year, or just over a year, you see increasing amounts of change, a maturational change in that brain. 

You can see that on a physical basis by the myelin developing and growing in the brain that clearly correlates as you get that more myelin, you get more control. So the baby suddenly isn’t just waving their hands around, but now is starting to reach for objects, no longer does a Palmer grasp, but does pincer grasp, is no longer just making simple sounds, but is making complex sounds. That all correlates together. Particularly the first few months, but even that first year, year and a half, there’s a dramatic maturational change in the brain that occurs. It has an impact on just normal development, but also maturation of your sleep habits and everything else.

Schulz: Is there anything else that I haven’t given you an opportunity to discuss, or something that you’d like to highlight?

Knowles: I think it’s what we started with: sleep really is important. As a culture, we have tended to de-emphasize how important it is particularly for the young developing brain. Having that opportunity to sleep and keeping a normal cycle really does improve maturation and development of the brain.

Infant Sleep And Longtime Tradition Returns To W.Va. Schools For Deaf, Blind, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, sleep is a key part of both mental and physical health for everyone. But for many parents, ensuring their baby is getting good sleep can be frustrating and elusive. We talk with an expert on infant sleep. Also, we visit the West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and the Blind to learn about a longtime tradition that has returned.

On this West Virginia Morning, sleep is a key part of both mental and physical health for everyone. But for many parents, ensuring their baby is getting good sleep can be frustrating and elusive. In our latest installment of our new series “Now What? A Series On Parenting,” reporter Chris Schulz speaks with Dr. Paul Knowles, a Marshall Health neurologist and assistant professor at Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, about infant sleep.

Also, in this show, a tradition at the West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and the Blind allowed kids from across the state to show off their braille and cane usage skills. It was placed on hiatus during the pandemic. This year, the tradition made a grand return. Jack Walker visited the school’s campus in Romney to learn more.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Eric Douglas is our news director and producer.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Child Behavioral Telehealth Services Coming To W.Va. Underserved Rural Areas 

Already underway in the Summers County community of Hinton, a prototype program is offering mental health support for pediatric patients with diagnoses including depression, anxiety and ADHD disorder.

A prototype program is offering mental health support for pediatric patients in the Summers County community of Hinton. Diagnosis and treatments include depression, anxiety and ADHD disorder.

The new program is a collaboration between Appalachian Regional Healthcare and Marshall Health Network. On appointment days, patients visit a rural health clinic, and are connected virtually to a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner (PMHNP). In addition to conducting initial psychiatric evaluations and follow-up appointments, the PMHNP also prescribes and evaluates psychopharmacologic treatments alongside a collaborating psychiatrist.

Dr. Susan Flesher is the Department of Pediatrics Chair at Marshall University’s Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine. She said psychiatric care is the perfect place for rural telehealth.

“It’s a little bit hard for us sometimes to think about a child coming in to look in an ear or listen to a heart,” Flesher said. “Those things take more technology on telehealth. With the care that we’re talking about, it’s a matter of talking with the child, the family, figuring out what the issues are, what the concerns are, doing some screening tests, providing therapy, medications, whatever the case may be. It’s perfectly suited to telehealth.”

Flesher said the program offers access to specific medical professionals that otherwise would not be readily available. 

There is a real shortage of psychiatrists and mental health nurse practitioners in rural areas,” Flesher said. “This is a service that they otherwise would not be receiving, or would have to travel a long distance to receive.”

Flesher said the Hinton program is a first step of an anticipated child mental telehealth network.

“We are in talks with some other places to expand this,” she said. “We don’t have signed contracts in place yet so I’m not necessarily free to speak, but we are definitely trying to provide this service where it is so very much needed, and there seems to be a lot of interest.”

The program is accepting new patients by referral. For more information, contact the Summers County ARH Rural Health Clinic at 304-466-2918.

New Heart Tech And A Talk With New Delegate Anitra Hamilton, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, Anitra Hamilton was selected to serve out the remainder of Del. Danielle Walker’s term, and reporter Chris Schulz sat down with the state’s newest delegate to discuss her new position and plans.

On this West Virginia Morning, in April, Del. Danielle Walker stepped down as representative for the 81st House District to become the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia.

Anitra Hamilton was selected to serve out the remainder of Walker’s term, and reporter Chris Schulz sat down with the state’s newest delegate to discuss her new position and plans.

Also, in this show, cardiologists at Marshall Health and St. Mary’s Regional Heart Institute are the first in West Virginia to use a new technology and mapping catheter to treat patients with complex cardiac arrhythmias (SMMC). Emily Rice has more.

And, West Virginia is mourning the loss of two police officers. Sgt. Cory Maynard, a state police officer, was killed in a shooting on Friday, and Patrol Officer First Class and K-9 handler Zane A. Breakiron was killed in a single motor vehicle crash while off-duty late Friday night or early Saturday morning.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and produced this episode.

Teresa Wills is our host.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

New Technology Improves Outcomes For Heart Patients

A team of cardiologists at Marshall Health and St. Mary’s Regional Heart Institute successfully used new technology to achieve better visualization and access to the heart, improving the success rate of cardiac ablation procedures.

Cardiologists at Marshall Health and St. Mary’s Regional Heart Institute are the first in West Virginia to use a new technology and mapping catheter to treat patients with complex cardiac arrhythmias.

Electrophysiologist Khalid Abozguia, a professor of cardiovascular services at the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine, and his team successfully used new technology to achieve better visualization and access to the heart, improving the success rate of cardiac ablation procedures.

The first cases using this technology were performed in April at St. Mary’s Regional Heart Institute and have shown excellent results for patients.

“During the procedure, a small device called a watchman will be implanted in a structure we call the left atrial appendage of the heart,” Abozguia said. “And we found the evidence that suggests that this device effectively seals off the appendage, which leads to a reduction in the risk of a blood clot and potentially causing a stroke without the need to take a blood thinner, long-term.”

Cardiac ablation is a procedure that scars tissue in the heart to block irregular electrical signals to help heart rhythm problems.

“Cardio neuro ablation is a groundbreaking procedure, specifically for a young patient who experienced a fainting episode commonly known in the medical field as syncope, it tends to be related mainly to overactive activation of one of the nerves we call vagal nerve,” Abozguia said. “Traditionally, these patients if they don’t improve despite lifestyle, adjustment or medication, they may end up needing a pacemaker to prevent these fainting episodes. However, cardio neuro ablation offers an alternative approach in my opinion, even though this is still early days for this procedure.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Charleston Area Medical Center and Marshall Health.

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