The Guttmacher Institute is a non-profit organization which works to advance reproductive health as defined by the World Health Organization. The institute operates in the United States and globally "through an interrelated program of social science research, policy analysis and public education." According to their mission statement, this program aims to "generate new ideas, encourage enlightened public debate, promote sound policy and program development and, ultimately, inform individual decision making."
The Guttmacher Institute in 1968 was founded as the "Center for Family Planning Program Development", a semi-autonomous division of The Planned Parenthood Federation of America. The Center was renamed in memory of Alan Frank Guttmacher, an Ob/Gyn and former president of Planned Parenthood, and the Guttmacher Institute became an independent, not-for-profit corporation in 1977. Guttmacher's four decades of experience claims to demonstrate that scientific evidence - when reliably collected and analyzed, compellingly presented and systematically disseminated - can make a difference in policies, programs, and medical practice.
The institute has offices in both New York City and Washington, D.C. As of 2007, it has an annual revenue of $15.8 million and expenses of $11.9 million, with an asset reserve of $22.4 million dollars. The institute produces two peer reviewed periodicals, International Family Planning Perspectives and Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, in addition to a third periodical on public policy, The Guttmacher Policy Review.
It is a women's health organization
Guttmacher Institute was created in 1968.
Manfred Guttmacher was born in 1898.
Manfred Guttmacher died in 1966.
The budget of Guttmacher Institute is 15,800,000 dollars.
Alan Edward Guttmacher was born in 1949.
Alan Frank Guttmacher died in 1974.
Alan Frank Guttmacher was born in 1898.
Manfred Schanfarber Guttmacher has written: 'America's last king' -- subject(s): Mental health
Alan Frank Guttmacher was an influential geneticist and former president of Planned Parenthood. He authored several works on genetics, family planning, and public health, advocating for reproductive rights and genetic research. Some of his notable works include "The Inauguration of Organized Health Services in Baltimore" and "Introduction to Public Health Genetics."
22% of all pregnancies, not counting miscarriages, end in abortion. (Guttmacher Institute)
An institution that is complex