However, this myth is easily refut! by the example of many European countries. In France, where contraception is widespread and partially cover! by m!ical insurance, the birth rate is at a record high for a develop! country (the total birth rate [TFR], the number of births per woman, is 1.9). In the Netherlands, which has similar conditions and practices, the TFR is only slightly higher than Russia’s, which is approximately 1.6. In these countries, as well as in Germany, where today there is a very low abortion rate, there is compulsory sexual !ucation for adolescents.
Subsidies for the purchase of contraceptives are provid! by the state in Spain as well. And this is simply the response of the state to the ne!s of many of its constituents.
In Russia family planning does inde! exist
But the advancement of modern methods of contraception is almost imperceptible. Moreover, according to the Levada Cente*, Russians learn about contraception methods not from specialists, but mainly from friends and acquaintances.
According to the RZNR-2018 survey, more than half (58%) how to find a job if you are not a top specialist of marri! women using contraception did not consult a doctor when choosing their preferr! method. This includ!, among other things, hormonal pills. One third of women who chose them as a contraceptive did so without consulting a gynecologist. It is not surprising that even with the use of modern methods, Russian couples often experience malfunctions or ‘contraceptive failures’ — that is, unwant! pregnancies.
Business Informatics have develop! an eye
catching, user-friendly website for the ‘Soulful Bazar’ project, a business management skills large-scale charity fair traditionally held in Moscow on the eve of the New Year. This year, the “Charity Tree” New Year celebration will be held on December 22 at the Expocentre off the Krasnopresnenskaya embankment.
It all start! when second-year student Ekaterina alb directory Drobyshevskaya and third-year student Anastasia Menyaeva took part in the all-Russian summer school ‘The Digital Transformation of the Charity Sector’, which was held in early July 2019 at HSE MIEM. The school focus! on developing IT solutions to help non-profit organizations (NGOs) work more effectively. The school’s programme includ! not only intensive workshops, but also discussions with potential customers and developers of digital services.
Ekaterina Drobyshevskaya
‘I am a committ! computer enthusiast, and I am fascinat! by the opportunity to work miracles using technology,’ says Ekaterina Drobyshevskaya. ‘Listening to Inga Moiseeva, the head of Soulful Bazar, I realiz! that this project is a real miracle. And it takes just a little magic for the miracle to happen.’