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Peer Review of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study”

Peer Review of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study”

This is the peer-review report for “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study.” 1. The sampling technique used in this paper [1] should be more detailed than it is. Respondents were said to have been selected by balloting from the 6 levels.

Bilkisu Nwankwo

JMIRx Med 2025;6:e72951

Peer Review of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study”

Peer Review of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study”

This is a peer-review report for “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study.” Dear Authors, Thank you very much for undertaking the study [1] titled “Levels and predictors of knowledge, attitude and practice of contraception among female TV undergraduates in Nigeria: a cross-sectional study” and submitting the manuscript to JMIR.

Kamal Kanti Biswas

JMIRx Med 2025;6:e72949

Authors’ Response to Peer Reviews of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study”

Authors’ Response to Peer Reviews of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study”

This is the authors’ response to peer-review reports of “Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study.” Dear Authors, Thank you very much for undertaking the study [2] titled “Levels and predictors of knowledge, attitude and practice of contraception among female TV undergraduates in Nigeria: a cross-sectional study” and submitting the manuscript to JMIR.

Hadizah Abigail Agbo, Philip Adewale Adeoye, Danjuma Ropzak Yilzung, Jawa Samson Mangut, Paul Friday Ogbada

JMIRx Med 2025;6:e72947

Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study

Levels and Predictors of Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Contraception Among Female TV Studies Undergraduates in Nigeria: Cross-Sectional Study

Only 85 of the 217 (39.2%) respondents disclosed the specific contraception being used. It shows that condoms (37/85, 44%) and oral contraceptive pills (OCPs; 31/85, 36%) were the most common contraceptives used by students at NTA TV College. Others, which accounted for 4.7%, have used implants, emergency contraception (EC), and other unnamed forms of contraception. Specific contraceptives currently being used or ever used among study respondents (n=85). a IUCD: intrauterine contraceptive device.

Hadizah Abigail Agbo, Philip Adewale Adeoye, Danjuma Ropzak Yilzung, Jawa Samson Mangut, Paul Friday Ogbada

JMIRx Med 2025;6:e56135

Insights on the Side Effects of Female Contraceptive Products From Online Drug Reviews: Natural Language Processing–Based Content Analysis

Insights on the Side Effects of Female Contraceptive Products From Online Drug Reviews: Natural Language Processing–Based Content Analysis

According to the United Nations, contraception is a critical issue impacting 1.9 billion women of reproductive age. Worldwide, approximately 922 million women or their partners use contraception. More than half of all contracepting women rely on modern contraceptive products designed to be used by women.

Nicole Groene, Audrey Nickel, Amanda E Rohn

JMIR AI 2025;4:e68809

Telemedicine Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic in 8 Countries From the International Sexual Health and Reproductive Health Consortium: Web-Based Cross-Sectional Survey Study

Telemedicine Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic in 8 Countries From the International Sexual Health and Reproductive Health Consortium: Web-Based Cross-Sectional Survey Study

During the pandemic, telemedicine was also recommended to be used for contraception counseling, shared decision-making, and managing potential side effects [7]. It was also used as a means of accessing abortion-related services during the pandemic [8]. Country-specific studies demonstrate that telemedicine was successfully implemented to provide SRH services during the pandemic, and it was a convenient and comfortable approach, especially for young people [9,10].

Rayner Kay Jin Tan, Devon Hensel, Olena Ivanova, Raquel Gomez Bravo, Adesola Olumide, Emmanuel Adebayo, Amanda Cleeve, Amanda Gesselman, Sonam Jyoti Shah, Helen Adesoba, Gifty Marley, Weiming Tang

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e60369

Simulation of Contraceptive Access for Adolescents and Young Adults Using a Pharmacist-Staffed e-Platform: Development, Usability, and Pilot Testing Study

Simulation of Contraceptive Access for Adolescents and Young Adults Using a Pharmacist-Staffed e-Platform: Development, Usability, and Pilot Testing Study

Pharmacist-prescribed contraception—a strategy already used in high-income and many low- and middle-income countries but rarely in the United States—is one such strategy. In 2019, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommended pharmacist-prescribed contraception without age restrictions as a necessary step to increase over-the-counter access to hormonal contraception and reduce the rate of inconsistent or nonuse of contraception [8].

Kayla Knowles, Susan Lee, Sophia Yapalater, Maria Taylor, Aletha Y Akers, Sarah Wood, Nadia Dowshen

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e60315

Changes in Reproductive Health Information-Seeking Behaviors After the Dobbs Decision: Systematic Search of the Wikimedia Database

Changes in Reproductive Health Information-Seeking Behaviors After the Dobbs Decision: Systematic Search of the Wikimedia Database

These studies revealed that Google searches for abortion, contraception, and reproductive health-related topics reached record levels after the Dobbs decision was leaked, especially in states with restrictive abortion policies. Importantly, the increased demand for reproductive health information is complicated by the overwhelming amount of abortion misinformation on the internet.

Mackenzie Lemieux, Cyrus Zhou, Caroline Cary, Jeannie Kelly

JMIR Infodemiology 2024;4:e64577

Feasibility of Sexual Health and Contraceptive Web Services for Adolescents and Young Adults: Retrospective Study of a Pilot Program on Reunion Island

Feasibility of Sexual Health and Contraceptive Web Services for Adolescents and Young Adults: Retrospective Study of a Pilot Program on Reunion Island

Moreover, data from the regional health observatory in 2019 reported that only half of sexually active AYAs aged 15 to 17 years used contraception during their first sexual encounter [7]. For young women aged 15 to 25 years who had already had their first sexual intercourse, a survey reported that 56% used a contraceptive method other than condoms and that a lack of knowledge and negative perceptions of contraception, along with the family taboo surrounding sexuality, contributed to it [7].

Danielle Reynaud, Nicolas Bouscaren, Emmanuelle Cartron, Catherine Marimoutou

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e52557

Integrating Sexual and Reproductive Health Equity Into Public Health Goals and Metrics: Comparative Analysis of Healthy People 2030’s Approach and a Person-Centered Approach to Contraceptive Access Using Population-Based Data

Integrating Sexual and Reproductive Health Equity Into Public Health Goals and Metrics: Comparative Analysis of Healthy People 2030’s Approach and a Person-Centered Approach to Contraceptive Access Using Population-Based Data

This paper focuses on 2 key population-level metrics of contraceptive access: a conventional metric reflecting use of effective contraception, which is prioritized in the HP2030 contraception-related objectives, and a person-centered metric, reflecting use of preferred method of contraception [53].

Anu Manchikanti Gomez, Reiley Diane Reed, Ariana H Bennett, Megan Kavanaugh

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e58009