The flourishing of the individual human person, the health of human society, and the ecological well being of planet earth are inextricably connected with the issues of human population, sexuality, and reproduction. Many academic disciplines have strong interests in these issues, approaching them from different perspectives and with different emphases. However, these areas of study are also infused with controversy and strong ideological positions arising from cultural, religious, political, and social traditions that sometimes clash with each other. To address these issues, two things are needed: (1) data that address questions from different underlying assumptions; (2) open and respectful discussion among scientists, clinicians, and policy makers who have different backgrounds, narrative frameworks, and conceptual perspectives (1). The new Section on Population, Reproductive and Sexual Health, Frontiers in Public Health will contribute constructively to these critical needs.
population reproductive health data, sexual health policy evidence, reproductive health ideological conflict, interdisciplinary reproductive research, population studies sexual health, evidence-based reproductive policy, reproductive rights data needs, sexual health academic disciplines, population health reproduction intersection, reproductive health data gaps
PMID 27014671 27014671 DOI 10.3389/fpubh.2016.00027 10.3389/fpubh.2016.00027
Cite this article
Stanford, J. B. (2016). Population, Reproductive, and Sexual Health: Data Are Essential Where Disciplines Meet and Ideologies Conflict. *Frontiers in public health*, *4*, 27. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2016.00027
Stanford JB. Population, Reproductive, and Sexual Health: Data Are Essential Where Disciplines Meet and Ideologies Conflict. Front Public Health. 2016;4:27. doi:10.3389/fpubh.2016.00027
Stanford, J. B. "Population, Reproductive, and Sexual Health: Data Are Essential Where Disciplines Meet and Ideologies Conflict." *Frontiers in public health*, vol. 4, 2016, pp. 27.
Keywords
Adolescent Pregnancy, Oppositional Collaboration, Population Dynamics, Reproductive Health, Sexual Health
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