Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Women's health startup pulls
#1
The Health of Women".[5] The WHO considers that an undue emphasis on reproductive health has been a major barrier to ensuring access to good quality health care for all women.[1] Conditions that affect both men and women, such as cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, also manifest differently in women.[6] Women's health issues also include medical situations in which women face problems not directly related to their biology, such as gender-differentiated access to medical treatment and other socioeconomic factors.[6] Women's health is of particular concern due to widespread discrimination against women in the world, leaving them disadvantaged.[1]
Reply
#2
The major differences in life expectancy for women between developed and developing countries lie in the childbearing years. If a woman survives this period, the differences between the two regions become less marked, since in later life non-communicable diseases (NCDs) become the major causes of death in women throughout the world, with cardiovascular deaths accounting for 45% of deaths in older women, followed by cancer (15%) and lung disease (10%). These create additional burdens on the resources of developing countries. Changing lifestyles, including diet, physical activity and cultural factors that favour larger body size in women, are contributing to an increasing problem with obesity and diabetes amongst women in these countries and increasing the risks of cardiovascular disease and other NCDs.[11][20]
Reply
#3
Women who are socially marginalized are more likely to die at younger ages than women who are not.[21] Women who have substance abuse disorders, who are homeless, who are sex workers, and/or who are imprisoned have significantly shorter lives than other women.[21] At any given age, women in these overlapping, stigmatized groups are approximately 10 to 13 times more likely to die than typical women of the same age.[21]
Reply
#4
Women and men differ in their chromosomal makeup, protein gene products, genomic imprinting, gene expression, signaling pathways, and hormonal environment. All of these necessitate caution in extrapolating information derived from biomarkers from one sex to the other.[6] Women are particularly vulnerable at the two extremes of life. Young women and adolescents are at risk from STIs, pregnancy and unsafe abortion, while older women often have few resources and are disadvantaged with respect to men, and also are at risk of dementia and abuse,
Reply
#5
I’ve delivered thousands of babies, but it still amazes me to see a baby’s big noggin fit through that small space. Even in the best of circumstances, the vagina usually ends up with a few battle scars. The majority of vaginal tears are minor, but severe tearing and complications can also occur. If childbearing is in your near future, it can be helpful to know the different types of tearing that could occur, how to prevent bad tearing, and how to heal a tear.
Reply
#6
Up to 80% percent of women will experience some amount of vaginal tearing at the time of delivery. Luckily the majority of these will be mild tearing of the skin around the vagina or urethra. Mild tearing can definitely cause some initial pain, but a tear usually heals within 4-6 weeks and doesn’t normally cause any long term side effects. More severe tears that go from the vagina to the muscle around the rectum occur in 3% of deliveries; and tears that extend from vagina to through the rectum (the dreaded “vag-anus” tear) occur in ~1% of vaginal deliveries.
Reply
#7
The more significant tears that extend to the muscles around the rectum and into the rectum itself have a higher rate of causing long term pain, difficulty controlling stool or gas, painful intercourse, and even in some cases fistulas (where the rectum and vagina connect become connected and stool passes spontaneously through the vagina). While these issues can usually be resolved with time, therapy, and additional surgeries, sometimes they do go on to cause ongoing issues.
Reply
#8
What kind of diet women must take to stay fit?
Reply
#9
Reading through this wealth of data I’d gathered over the decades, i noticed there was no single source that offered all the answers. No single sleep expert’s message would work for everybody because all approached sleep from their own perspective or field of research.Check more on
womens health
Reply
#10
(01-12-2020, 04:07 PM)turbulentboris Wrote: Reading through this wealth of data I’d gathered over the decades, i noticed there was no single source that offered all the answers. No single sleep expert’s message would work for everybody because all approached sleep from their own perspective or field of research.Check more on
womens health
Thanks for the link guys.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)