276°
Posted 20 hours ago

The Female Factor: Making women’s health count – and what it means for you

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Jonathan Wolf: And can you explain a bit more what that is? I think for a lot of listeners, they've never even heard of it. Yeah. What, what's going on? And for people who are worrying about this, maybe either they, they think they might be experiencing it, or maybe they've even had it diagnosed, you know, what can they do? Yeah. Jonathan Wolf: And that's a lot of people you're talking about. So if you're saying 20, 40% of all women, women are slightly more than half the population and you're in this period of your life for what, like half your life or something like, that's an enormous number of people.

These female sex hormones, and while they are high in women, they're also in men, and so they have really important effects in other aspects of health. Their primary role will be in reproduction and across the menstrual cycle. The main goal is to release an egg during ovulation and also to prepare the wombs lining to support a pregnancy and.

Find a book you’ll love, get our Word Up newsletter

And so, for the past three years (in between COVID shifts at the hospital), I’ve dedicated most of my time to researching how to help women live healthier, happier lives. And The Female Factor was born. While Meta on several occasions has apologized and re-instated female reproductive health content that it says was mistakenly removed, it still stipulates an age restriction in its policy. Therefore, even if the updated policy was perfectly implemented, Meta would still be green lighting the practise of censoring crucial content from certain audiences. It also covers to how to eat to ease the menopausal transition and staying active during pregnancy as well as countless other female specific issues. We found that it increased engagement because it doesn’t flag your content as being inappropriate to certain audiences,” Wallace outlined.

Jonathan Wolf: And tell me a bit more about it because I think, again, that's one of those things that I'm definitely aware exists and I'm treading carefully cause my wife will definitely be listening to this. Again, I think something that's really not talked about very much. When would you expect this to start? What do most people experience?But if you find that exercise is the last thing that you wanna do, or that doing something high in intensity is something that would make you feel worse. Low intensity exercise in particular. Yoga, there's a lot of trials around yoga and the benefit in menstrual symptoms and also PMS, and that's likely because. It's not a great place to be. And actually eating this sort of really gut healthy diet that, you talked about, can potentially really reduce that level of inflammation and therefore reduce your symptoms, make you feel better, presumably be good for your long-term health. And this is all the classic sort of high fiber plant led diet. CNN asked Meta about the reports that it is continuing to remove, restrict, and shadow-ban female reproductive health content. CNN also asked Meta why all female reproductive health, including menstrual health, is classified as an 18+ issue.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment