jane davis: that's really the beauty of the program. we have some really very committed, dedicated counselors that spend a lot of time speaking to the patients even after the physician visit. they meet with the patient for about 15 to 20 minutes, sometimes even longer than that, and go over the patient's questions about the pregnancy, about breast feeding, about contraception because we really try to-- try to counsel them on contraception even while they're still pregnant. the idea, of course, is to prevent more unintended pregnancies. today's methods of birth control rarely fail. daniel mishell: well when i was in training in the 1950's, the only contraceptives available were the barrier methods, the condom and the diaphragm. the barrier methods frequently failed and abortion was not legal and there were a large number of unwanted births before oral contraceptives became available. oral contraceptives first came on the market in the 1960's. daniel mishell: that was a huge advance, enabling or empowering women to control their time of r