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Consumer Health Features

 Single Minded Women.com

"Vaginal Health: Is Everything All Right Down There?"

Single women preen. We inspect our nails, our hair, our faces. Our breasts and (depending on how well your torso twists) butts get the once-over regularly, too. How familiar are we with what’s between our legs?

I’ll be frank — there are times in my life when I’ve gone longer than desired without
the company of someone else who might inspect those folds and crevices “down
there.” Okay, maybe the thought of being inspected is about as hot as visualizing your annual ‘well woman’ exam from the practitioner’s perspective. But let’s be honest — when something’s amiss, an intimate partner is at least handy for keeping you self-vigilant, if not exactly giving you a detailed report from down south.

During those times when you feel like letting it all go — you know, when shaving goes out the window longer than usual — it’s still important to keep an eye on things… down there.

How many euphemisms can I come up with before I finally blurt out vulva and vagina?

Read the full article...

SMW BLOG

"When You Get Down to It"

I’m a bottom line girl. The term “indecisive” has never been used to describe me. I think that’s a good thing.

I think.

Maybe it’s my Texan heritage. Say what you will about those of us from the Lone Star State (and, I know, there’s a lot to say…) but if there’s one thing cowboys and cowgirls are good at, it’s being definitive and clear.
To a fault at times.

Maybe I inherited it from all the women in my ancestry, the original “career women” before it was cool. Intense decisiveness was likely an automatic benefit of working and kid-raising in an era when men didn’t do a thing at home but mow yards and BBQ occasionally.

You know that old saying about “a woman’s prerogative is to change her mind”?
I never got it.

Not that I never change my mind. I can sway like a willow with the best of them. Survival requires that we be flexible. Take health and fitness knowledge. Today’s nutrition advice is tomorrow’s bull hockey.

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Betty Confidential.com  

"In This Case, Hindsight Is About $400"
Hasty, vigorous Gardasil campaign not necessarily effective or safe

Have you had yours yet? What about your daughters?
Your sisters? Every woman you know ... don't you want to
"help them avoid being a statistic"?

Too late for that. How many of us bought into the panic
that Merck sold as cancer prevention in the form of a
vaccine for HPV?

Now, the folks who provided research data - even the
pediatrician who chaired the CDC's committee that
recommended vaccinating all pubescent girls - are saying
that pressure from the drug's manufacturer, Merck, was
key in creating the tsunami effect that pushed Gardasil in
only six months from application to FDA approval, a
process that typically takes several years.

The drug-development industry is a funny business.


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 The Buzz Magazine

Bellaire edition, June 2006

"A Summer to Remember"

Remember how long summer seemed to last when you were a kid? Blue sky, thick with cicada calls. Whether you were running around taking the biggest bite of unleashed freedom that your parents allowed, or just hanging out in the deepest shade you could find, there was no reason to stay inside -- even the Texas sun couldn't keep us in the house!

Not so today. One mother, frustrated with her children's repetitive whining about the heat during a day at the park, exclaimed “They're just like air-conditioned wimps!”

Clamoring for cool comfort aside, so many things are different for today's Houston children. More prevalent crime and mesmerizing indoor activities combine to create a perplexing situation. We have our own idyllic childhood summers lolling around in our memories. We want our families to have fond remembrances of their own. Is it possible to re-create those summers of old?

Read full article...


inFertility Times Magazine

2005

Sample -- Oocyte Cryopreservation: The Next Fertile Frontier

Many aspects of infertility seem just plain unfair, particularly to those who endure it. In the first place, it's tough for a lot of people to get beyond old fashioned notions about infertility being primarily a woman's problem. That's a cultural issue. Then, for those who do venture forth and seek fertility assistance, most of the diagnostic and treatment steps taken by female patients are more invasive than those taken by their male partners. Further, men have the advantage of more opportunities to be fertile -- their bodies (even those with many forms of infertility) are continually creating new sperm cells, while women are born with a finite supply. Those are just the inescapable results of biology.

Those same biological facts are the reason that many existing treatments for male infertility have been relatively easy to come by for researchers and clinicians. Cryopreservation, a generic name for different cell freezing techniques, is one arena of treatment that was offering reproductive hope to men long before women were able to take advantage of what it has to offer. The use of frozen sperm for fertility treatment has become commonplace and standard practice. The successful use of frozen eggs, however, has been much more limited by its slow scientific advance since the initial report in 1986 (Chen, Lancet 1986:1:8486) of a resulting pregnancy. Men have been able to put their fatherhood plans on deep-freeze for any number of reasons for about 30 years now, while most women are still struggling to beat their increasingly deafening biological clocks.

Style & Living Magazine

2004

Sample -- Making Dreams Come True: Today's Options for Building Families

Dr. Sonja Kristiansen knows firsthand the tug-of-war between dedication to career and motherhood. Becoming an OB/Gyn was important to her, so she devoted her time and energy accordingly to college, medical school, and finally residency. While in her OB/Gyn residency, she fell in love —with both her future husband and future career.

“I became addicted after seeing the smile of an infertility patient with whom we'd had success,” Dr. Kristiansen remembers. Her choice to further her training in the field of reproductive endocrinology and infertility (REI) was rewarding, even while it caused another delay in her own family-building dreams.

Eventually she had her son Kyle at the age of 34 and, four long years later, Christopher was born to the infertility specialist.

From her now nearly decade-long practice in fertility treatment, Dr. Kristiansen knows that there millions of women who, just like her, are struggling with the hard decisions involved in timing their family-building choices...

ePregnancy Magazine

2002

Sample -- Why Can't I Have Another Baby?

Like so many of your friends and family, you've managed to get your firstborn off on the right foot and you're ready to bring another life into the happy mix. You daydream about watching your children walk through life, hand in hand, helping each other through rough spots and being each others' first friends.

Perhaps you've spent a few months journeying down the road commonly called TTC – trying to conceive. If you never had problems getting pregnant the first time, you're feeling confident that there won't be roadblocks now. You tell yourself to be patient, that good things come to those who wait. You may be tiring of hearing others' very personal inquiries and well-meaning advice.

Some time down that road, it dawns on you – there could be a genuine problem here. You search the Internet and books for tips and tricks, foods to eat, herbs to ingest, exercises to do or to avoid, in an effort to hopefully see that magic wand change colors. Finally, you realize, it's time to share your struggle with someone who can answer the question that's been lurking in the back of your mind: “Is there some reason that I'm not pregnant again?”

About.com

Guide to Infertility, 2000

Sample -- Future Fertility:Play Now, Pay Later?

"Dear Guide,
My friend and I are curious to know if there is a way of finding out whether a person is infertile or not without having sex. We know that you can tell you are infertile if you have been trying to conceive but can not. But we are just curious to know if there is another way of finding out, besides going through the risk of pregnancy. It's like, can a virgin girl know that she is not capable of bearing a child someday? And what are some situational cases that makes a girl infertile? Thanks and I'll be waiting for ur response."

Is there a simple test for future fertility?
No.
However, there are some health indicators which might act as red flags, signaling possible problems. Most importantly, it is possible to make efforts to protect your plans to have children.

Okay. You're only 15 or 18 or 22 years old, and the thought of having kids hasn't really crossed your mind yet, save for maybe a few moments of panic when your period was late.

Or you're a guy, and you think that most cases of infertility are due to women's conditions. Fact is, male infertility accounts for approximately half of all diagnosed cases.

You figure, you or your partner are on The Pill or using Depo Provera or an IUD, so everything's cool. Better yet, you're not sexually active at all. You're being smarter than a lot of young women and men who are gambling it all by risking early parenthood.

But did you know that you still might be jeopardizing your own fertility's future?