Weinstein is an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Harvard Medical School. Pulliam is an assistant professor in the Division of Urogynecology and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery, ...
You sneeze, and instead of a polite “bless you”, your bladder loses control. A laugh turns into a dribble. A cough? Well, tissues are not the only thing getting used. If this sounds familiar, you ...
Women with continence issues are reluctant to continue many sports and gym programs, but new research has found a way to help women undertake resistance training that will help reduce the risk of ...
COMORBIDITIES FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH DIABETES. IN TONIGHT’S WOMAN’S DOCTOR, URINARY INCONTINENCE IS A PROBLEM. IT’S NOT A NORMAL PROCESS OF AGING. MERCY MEDICAL CENTER DOCTOR AYESHA KOHLI IS SAYING ...
May is Women's Health Month, but a lot of young women are suffering in silence with private health issues "down there," like incontinence and pain. "This is something that happens and people just aren ...
Women who experience urinary incontinence after giving birth may get just as much relief from telehealth as they do from physical therapy, a new study has found. Women who experience urinary ...
Geeta Nayar, who has lived with bowel incontinence since her daughter was born, urges others not to suffer in silence.
Acupuncture reduced episodes and symptoms of urinary incontinence in women, according to a meta-analysis of 10 clinical studies. Electroacupuncture for SUI had the strongest supporting evidence, ...
But all that changed when she started experiencing debilitating bladder spasms and urinary incontinence, and later daily ...
As she walked into her fitness class, Kim Vopni, 53, felt a familiar wave of embarrassment and frustration. "Not another leak," she despaired and headed to the ladies' room. It was the telltale sign ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Pelvic yoga did not significantly reduce UI in women compared with physical conditioning. However, the findings ...
Women who experience urinary incontinence after giving birth may get just as much relief from telehealth as they do from physical therapy, a new UC San Francisco study has found. It is the first ...