Get the top three things to know in women's health + wellness, every weekday:

IUDs, Plan B, + “extrauterine children”

the top things to know in women’s health and wellness today:

  • Birth control: It’s wildly popular in America. A poll found that 80% of voters (including 72% of Republicans) said protecting access to birth control was “deeply important.” This matters because Alabama’s state supreme court ruling that embryos are “extrauterine children” could next target IUDs and the morning after pill, since they can prevent embryo implantation.
     
  • Speaking of Alabama, New York Magazine profiled the actual living people affected by this decision, and how their lives have been totally upended.
     
  • Why do teens and tweens care so much about preventing aging skin? This op-ed theorizes that the Gen Z/Alpha skin serum fixation has replaced the fat-phobia that millennials grew up with

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Everything
Fertility
Birth Control
Menopause
Cardiovascular
Wellness+ Beauty

TOP STORIES TODAY: the most important reads we’ve found, and why they matter.

EVERYTHING

Women’s Default Diagnosis: Hysteria

What: The New York Times reviews a new book from Dr. Elizabeth Comen, a breast cancer specialist, that looks at the history of medicine and finds “centuries of diminishment by the medical establishment” of women’s bodies and conditions.

Why it matters: Comen argues that legacy “continues to shape the lives of women patents” today. As she put it, the “anxious female, the hysterical female, has been a ghost looming and woven through all of medical history…It’s a default diagnosis.”

Source: New York Times

FERTILITY

The Actual Lives Put on Hold in Alabama

What: New York Magazine follows families in Alabama desperately scrambling to get their embryos transferred out of state so they can have them successfully implanted. Last week the state’s supreme court effectively shut down IVF procedures after ruling all embryos were “extrauterine children”.

Why it matters: “[Caroline] Veazey, who has already lived through the physical and emotional pain of egg retrieval, is afraid her embryos won’t be able to get out of the state. ‘If that happens, I think I’m going to end up in a mental hospital and that is not exaggerating,’ she said.”

Source: New York Magazine

IVF Embryos Show Cell Division Errors Cause Many Pregnancy Losses

What: Researchers looked at 1,000 embryos that stopped developing from IVF procedures to learn why they didn’t progress further. They found issues with cell division were a major abnormality, for example, one cell dividing into three cells instead of two. As one researcher put it: “There is a lot of evidence that during the first cell divisions, human embryos make a lot of mistakes.”

Why it matters: Issues with division happened regardless of parents’ ages, and could point to greater understand for early pregnancy loss in general. (It also highlights how absurd it is to ban IVF because of embryos at these stages!)

Source: Scientific American

BIRTH CONTROL

Birth Control: Americans Really Like It

What: A poll found birth control is wildly popular in America. (Not shocking!) Eighty percent of voters said protecting access to contraception was “deeply important” to them, including 72% of Republicans.

Why it matters: The poll was obtained by the New York Times just a few days after Alabama’s state supreme court effectively shut down IVF access, ruling that embryos were “extrauterine children.” That ruling could disrupt access to IUDs and the morning after pill in the state, which can prevent embryos from implanting in the uterus.

Source: New York Times

MENOPAUSE

Is Menopause Getting Worse for Each Generation?

What: A physician breaks down the scientific takes on whether menopause is getting worse over generations. Some studies say yes, but the reasons are difficult to pinpoint. The best evidence comes from a study that began in 1994 and is still following women today. They found “a range of factors — such as lower education level and higher stress and anxiety — were linked to women experiencing hot flashes and night sweats for a longer period.”

Why it matters: It may be that changes to our DNA, caused by our environments and daily stressors, could be making menopause worse now than it was for our great-grandmothers.  Figuring out why would help.

Source: Washington Post

CARDIOVASCULAR

Women Get Faster Benefit from Exercising Than Men

What: A study from the American College of Cardiology suggested that women needed just under 2.5 hours of moderate to vigorous exercise each week to see major benefits, compared to the five hours that men need. Women who reported regularly exercising had a 36% lower risk of dying from cardiovascular issues.

Why it matters: Heart disease is the number one killer of women in America.

Source: CBS

WELLNESS AND BEAUTY

Did We Swap Diet Culture for Skin Care Culture?

What: An opinion essay theorizing that Gen Z’s (and younger) fixation on youthful skin has replaced the fear of fat that millennial women grew up on, a la Victoria’s Secret Angels.

Why it matters: It’s the first interesting explanation I’ve come across to explain the skin care craze among the very young.

Source: New York Times