4.8 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 26 July 2023
⏱️ 72 minutes
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0:00.0 | We have known since 1994 that being a woman is the second most impactful risk factor |
0:14.7 | for developing Alzheimer's disease after getting older. |
0:18.5 | But everybody associates Alzheimer's disease with old age, nobody talks about the fact |
0:24.7 | that still today, almost two-thirds of all Alzheimer's cases are women. |
0:32.7 | From this stuff your mother never told you to the stuff your doctor never learned. |
0:36.8 | On health is what happens when a midwife, plus a Yale-trained MD, |
0:40.9 | shares about all things women's health. From periods to menopause, sex to reproductive health |
0:46.4 | politics, motherhood to mental health, joined me for taboo busting conversations that demystify |
0:52.4 | and destigmatize our bodies, all while bridging the gap between conventional medicine and wellness. |
0:58.0 | Along the way, we'll be exploring the science and wisdom of how our bodies work, |
1:02.1 | what makes us well, what gets in the way, and how we can live our best lives on our terms. |
1:08.0 | When it comes to women's health and well-being, there's nothing we won't talk about. |
1:11.8 | The new medicine for women is here. I'm Dr. Revivaram, welcome to the podcast. |
1:23.2 | Well, we might have some fleeting concern for our brain health when we're |
1:27.6 | postpartum or in perimenopause, like when we wonder where we left the car keys one too many times, |
1:32.8 | hint, check the freezer in menopause, and the diaper bag or car seat if you have a baby. |
1:38.0 | Brain health, in fact, isn't something most of us spend much time thinking about unless we're |
1:42.7 | faced with the loved one with dementia, a wrenching condition for a person to experience, |
1:46.8 | and also for their family to watch and go through. Yet Alzheimer's disease affects twice |
1:52.1 | as many women as men, even adjusting for our longer lifespans. Researchers estimate that nearly |
1:57.9 | two-thirds of those living with Alzheimer's in the United States are women, and menopause |
2:02.8 | possibly increases our vulnerability to it. Still, medical research has continued to marginalize |
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