Historically research has focused on men.
As one example,
women are under-represented
in major clinical trials for cancers that affect both sexes, a new
study found.
Researchers say several factors could be responsible, from
childcare issues to reluctance by researchers to expose women of
childbearing age to trial drugs and treatments.
In other areas where research into women's medical problems is
lacking, the issue is not just about sexism. Women's hormone
fluctuations are, well, complicated and can confound basic findings. But
in recent years, women have been getting increased attention.
Still, much misinformation about the female body circulates in mainstream consciousness.
A doctor can tell if a woman is a virgin.Even when using 10-fold magnification,
doctors can not accurately sort virgins from the sexually-active,
several studies have reported.
It is not as simple as looking for a hole
in the hymen because, well, there is always a hole in the hymen.
"Some
people think the hymen seals off the vagina [until virginity is lost],
but that is just not true," said Dr. Rachel Vreeman of Indiana
University and Carroll's co-author of "Don't Swallow Your Gum." In the
rare cases when it is sealed, period blood builds in the uterus and
causes severe medical problems, she said.
Antibiotics make birth control pills unreliable."Many physicians even believe this," Carroll said. Alone, birth control
pills fail about one percent of the time. And that failure rate is
unchanged when taken with the vast majority of antibiotics, Carroll
said.
A possible exception is rifampin, the antibiotic prescribed
for tuberculosis. Rifampin does lower pregnancy-protecting hormone
levels induced by birth control pills, but whether the effect is large
enough to increase pregnancy risk is unclear. Carroll thinks rifampin
research spurred the antibiotic/birth control rumor. "Sometimes people
say things and they just take off," he said.
Women and men need equal sleep.Tossing and turning not only causes women
more psychological distress, it also raises their insulin and
inflammation levels — risk factors for compromised health, found a 2008
study of 210 people led by Edward Suarez at Duke University.
A
study of more than 6,000 participants, led by researchers at the
University of Warwick in 2007, found that women who slept five or less
hours a night were twice as likely to suffer from hypertension than
women who slept for seven or more hours. Among men, there was no such
relationship. Sleeping Beauty may be better off waking up on her own
watch.
Menopause causes sex drive to nosedive.The Change is not necessarily one that
happens in the bedroom. A comprehensive survey of sexual habits in the
United States, completed by Edward Laumann and colleagues in 1994, found
that roughly half of women in their fifties have sex several times a
month.
While hot flashes and other discomforts may make a women temporarily not in the mood, there is not a direct link between menopause and sexual desire, Vreeman said. So if you are entering the Big M, there is no reason to say good-bye to the Big O.
A women can't get pregnant during her period.While a woman is unlikely to conceive during menstruation,
"nothing, when it comes to pregnancy, is impossible," said Aaron
Carroll of Indiana University and co-author of "Don't Swallow Your Gum:
Myths, Half-truths and Outright Lies About Your Body and Health" (St.
Martin's Griffin, 2009).
Once inside a woman, sperm can wait for
an egg for up to a week. Ovulation can occur soon after, or even during,
the bleeding phase of a woman's menstrual cycle, giving patient sperm
the chance to get lucky. The timing method of birth control doesn't work
well, Carroll said, agreeing that couples who practice it are often
called: parents.
SOURCES: LIVESCIENCE
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