Newsletter

Newsletter The Women’s Health Activist® is a bimonthly publication of the National Women’s Health Network. We’d like to hear from you. Please e-mail questions or comments to editor@nwhn.org.

2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012

What is the Fuss about Comparative Effectiveness Research?

March/April 2010

By Rachel Walden

Date Published: 
Mon, March 01, 2010

Sore Spots and G-Spots

March/April 2010

SORES SPOTS

For $29.95, you can “put the pink back in your genitals.”  My New Pink Button is a “genital cosmetic colorant” or, as we like to call it, vagina make-up.  It will give your vaginal lips a more “youthful glow”, but only for a 48-72-hour time period. The product comes in four different colors, one of which was formulated for women of color. We applaud the diversity effort, but love our vaginal lips as they are. We’ll add this one to the list of products aiming to “fix” what is not broken.

Date Published: 
Mon, March 01, 2010

Snapshots

March/April 2010

 

Snapshots

Date Published: 
Mon, March 01, 2010

Connecting National Debates on Access to Health Care and the Economic Crisis: A Feminist Perspective

March/April 2010


By Stephanie Rytilahti

Date Published: 
Mon, March 01, 2010

Fat is a Feminist Issue and a Health Issue — How Can Women’s Health Advocates Help?

March/April 2010

By Ninia Baehr, RN

I ask myself this question every day. As a public health professional, I manage a nutrition and physical activity program to prevent obesity in Montana. As a feminist, I desire women’s freedom from oppression – including what author Kim Chernin called the “tyranny of slenderness.”

Building on what we can get to get to what we really want

March/April 2010

by Cindy Pearson

Date Published: 
Mon, March 01, 2010

U.S. Playing Reproductive Roulette with Dangerous Chemicals

January/February 2010

By Reece Rushing

Reproductive health in the United States is declining as human exposure to dangerous chemicals is rising. Fertility problems, miscarriages, pre-term births, and birth defects are all up. Meanwhile, the number of chemicals registered for commercial use now stands at 80,000 — a 30 percent increase since 1979.

Snapshots

January/February 2010

Age, race, region and insurance status play a large role in the type of hysterectomy that women receive. Researchers used records from the 2005 Nationwide Inpatient Sample, which collects patient discharge data from approximately 90% of U.S. hospitals, to determine rates of laparoscopic vs. vaginal and abdominal hysterectomy. Laparoscopic techniques are more expensive than abdominal hysterectomies, but offer faster recovery, less blood loss, fewer infections, and require shorter hospital stays.

Prescription for Change -- The Mammogram Industry: Wolves in Pink Wool

January/February 2010

By Charlea T. Massion, M.D. & Adriane Fugh-Berman, M.D.

Sore Spots & G-Spots

January/February 2010

G SPOTS

Thanks to Our 2009 Fall Reception Sponsors

January/February 2010

Leader $5000+
Representative Maxine Grad
Sally Rynne

Watchdog $2,500+
Lisa Rarick, M.D.

Innovator $1000+
Philip Corfman & Harriet Presser
Barbara Ehrenreich
Adriane Fugh- Berman
Malcolm Jones
Joanne Marqusee
NWHN Board of Directors
Cynthia Pearson
Lyle Pearson Public Welfare Foundation
Roger Telschow & Ecoprint*
Venable, LLP

Fighting For Women

January/February 2010

By Cindy Pearson, Executive Director