Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research (SRH)
Including the Human Reproduction Special Programme (HRP)

Guidelines development

Recommendations in WHO guidelines are based on sound scientific evidence. Fundamental steps in the process for guideline development include formulating key questions, evidence retrieval and synthesis, and appraisal of the quality of the evidence. But the methods used in these steps were originally conceived for the development of clinical interventions as part of the evidence-based medicine movement.

Today, WHO develops guidelines on a broad array of clinical, public health, health system, health promotion and implementation strategies. These interventions are often highly context-specific, with multiple factors that directly and indirectly impact the health and societal outcomes.

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Latest guidelines

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Abortion care guideline, 2nd ed

The objective of this guideline is to present the complete set of all WHO recommendations and best practice statements relating to abortion. While legal,...

Digital adaptation kit for self-monitoring of blood pressure during pregnancy: operational requirements for implementing WHO recommendations in digital systems

The Digital adaptation kit (DAK) for self-monitoring blood pressure during pregnancy enables countries to better help pregnant women manage hypertensive...

WHO recommendations on the management of sickle-cell disease during pregnancy, childbirth and the interpregnancy period

Sickle-cell disease (SCD) is a group of autosomal recessive haemoglobin disorders that results from a gene mutation in the β-subunit of haemoglobin....

Abortion

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Adolescent health

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Cervical cancer

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Contraception

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Digital health

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Female genital mutilation

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Gender and rights

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Maternal and perinatal health

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Self-care interventions

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Sexually transmitted infections

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Violence against women

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