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

The Texas OB-GYN Exodus  

What: The New Yorker has a deep dive on the increasing number of OBGYNs leaving Texas due to restrictive abortion laws and challenging working conditions. This is exacerbating healthcare access issues for women in the state, particularly in rural areas. In one example, the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley’s entire OB-GYN department is shutting down, highlighting the severity of the crisis.

Key line: “…Eventually, her family doctor referred her to another physician: Tony Ogburn, the founding chairman of the ob-gyn department at the nearby University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. Ogburn, a tall man of sixty-four, with white hair and rimless glasses, had come to the Valley eight years before, with a mission to improve health care for women. When he read Garcia’s file, he was outraged. After carrying the dead fetus for weeks, she risked needing a full hysterectomy. Why had she had to wait this long?”

Source: New Yorker // https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/12/02/the-texas-ob-gyn-exodus

More News Snippets
The Infertility Panic in America

Looking at infertiity rates in the wake of Trump administration officials, like top health nominee RFK Jr., claiming that it is on the rise.

The Texas OB-GYN Exodus  

In one example, the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley’s entire OB-GYN department is shutting down, highlighting the severity of the crisis.

Saving the Tiniest Babies

Advances in neonatal care now make it possible to save extremely premature babies, some born as early as 22 weeks.

Menopause and Muscle Pain

How hormonal changes during menopause, particularly the decline in estrogen levels, can lead to muscle pain and body aches.

Georgia Fires Entire Maternal Mortality Committee

Georgia state officials shut down an entire committee dedicated to reviewing maternal mortality in the state, after ProPublica reported in September on the deaths of two women as a result of the state’s abortion ban.

Depression Can Cause Period Pain

After analyzing genetic data from over 600,000 people, researchers found that depression likely causes period pain–rather than resulting from it.