Women's Unique Heart Disease Risks

Women's Unique Heart Disease Risks

Heart disease is the number one cause of death among women in the U.S. yet it remains woefully under-diagnosed. Part of the reason is that heart attacks were, from the 19th century well into the 20th, viewed as being caused by stress. It was a disease for “hard-working and ambitious men,” and dying of a heart attack, like sweating, was simply not something a proper woman did.

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What women need to do to be heart healthy

What women need to do to be heart healthy

Throughout their lifetime, women often focus on preventing breast cancer or osteoporosis as they are touted more as being a “woman’s disease.”  But for a woman living in the United States, heart disease is the leading cause of death and the earlier in her life a woman takes steps to reduce her risk, the less likely she’ll face that scenario. 

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Older Women Need Cervical Screening

Older Women Need Cervical Screening

Old habits and mindsets die hard, and sometimes that can have a real impact on our quality of life. For example, most every woman is under the impression, borne of generations of professional medical understanding and advice, that cervical cancer primarily affects younger women. In fact, a new study indicates that incidence rates of cervical cancer do not begin to decline until 85 years of age among women without a hysterectomy. Furthermore, the data show that women over 65 who have not been recently screened may benefit from continued surveillance.

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What every woman must share with her gynecologist

What every woman must share with her gynecologist

A trip to the gynecologist is usually not at the top of most women’s list of things to do.  You’re flat on your back, feet in stirrups with your private parts being inspected by someone you mainly see once a year.  But that yearly visit to the gynecologist is a very important part of a woman’s health making it imperative to not hold back on certain health issues. 

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A Blood Test for Breast Cancer?

A Blood Test for Breast Cancer?

Doctors are now able to better identify breast cancers at higher risk for recurrence and track the success or failure of treatment – via asimple blood test. This is thanks to the discovery of a new biomarker, called cMethDNA, discovered in the blood of women with advanced breast cancer by scientists at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.

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9 ways women can lower risk of breast cancer

9 ways women can lower risk of breast cancer

The one cancer for woman that makes them take notice the most is breast cancer.  This is understandable since other than lung cancer, breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women.  It is estimated that in 2017, there will be 252,710 new cases of the disease with one in eight women who will develop invasive breast cancer in their lifetime. 

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