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Blood

The Science, Medicine, and Mythology of Menstruation

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
0 of 1 copy available
Most women can expect to have hundreds of periods in a lifetime. And yet few are given the tools to understand the science of their own cycle, how it changes over their lifetime, and how it connects to their overall health.
Despite its significance, most education about menstruation focuses either on increasing the chances of pregnancy or preventing it. And while both are crucial, women deserve to know more about their bodies than just what happens in service to reproduction. Instead, the patriarchy has weaponized menstruation through outdated cultural norms, medical dismissal, inadequate menstrual accommodations, and useless products. To distinguish medicine from mythology, people need information. To advocate for ourselves, we need to know how our bodies work. Consequently, many people suffer in silence, thinking their bodies are uniquely broken, or they turn to disreputable sources.
In this practical, inclusive guide to menstruation, Dr. Jen Gunter delivers empowerment through knowledge. She explains what's typical, what's concerning, and when to seek care, while also examining the historical and social myths which keep women uninformed and disenfranchised. Written with no-nonsense expertise and frank, fearless wit, Blood gives women the tools to take back control of their bodies and kick menstrual shame to the curb. Period.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from November 13, 2023
      Gynecologist Gunter (The Menopause Manifesto) delivers a superb overview of “the menstrual cycle and the medical conditions and therapies associated with” it. Delving into the science of periods, Gunter explains that “seven to 10 days after ovulation,” endometrium in the uterus fills “with storage sugars and lipids” to provide nourishment for potential embryos; if conception doesn’t occur, the endometrium is expelled and the process restarts. Patriarchal perspectives, Gunter contends, have dominated women’s healthcare for centuries (ancient Greek men viewed menstruation as “proof that women have troublesome physiology”), and women continue to be underserved by the medical research community, as evidenced by the fact that government-funded medical studies weren’t required to include women until 1993 and that the U.S. only spends about $2 per patient on endometriosis research per year, compared to $31.30 on diabetes, “which affects the same number of people.” Gunter is a sharp critic of the ways in which menstrual complications have been dismissed by the medical establishment (she notes that despite painful periods affecting a majority of women, they are often dismissed as “exaggerated and a sign of weakness” while “billions of dollars of funding” are showered on erectile dysfunction), and her talent for explicating the biology of periods will engage even the scientifically uninclined. Filled with piercing social analysis and enlightening science, this one’s a winner. Agent: Jill Marr, Sandra Dijkstra Literary.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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