3 mins read

Vision Testing for Children

Some parents first learn their children have vision problems after they start attending school, when the teacher sends home a note saying little Johnny is having trouble seeing the blackboard. Up to 10 percent of pre-school children have vision problems, many of which can be corrected if caught early enough through vision testing and screening. The American Academy of Pediatrics advocates childhood vision screenings begin as early as the newborn period.

3 mins read

Causes of Breast Cancer in Women

Breast cancer can can afflict both men and women, but it is far more prevalent among women. It is the second-most commonly diagnosed type of cancer among women, exceeded only by skin cancer. Massive breast cancer awareness campaigns and improved early detection and treatment methods have contributed to a steadily increasing survival rate for breast cancer victims, but the medical community is still not sure of the causes of breast cancer in women.

3 mins read

Diet for Menopausal Women

Menopause, sometimes referred to as the change of life, is a normal, natural part of the aging process — not a disease or medical condition. Menopause refers the end of a woman’s reproductive fertility when a woman’s ovaries cease to produce viable eggs and is marked as having occurred 12 months after her final menstrual period. Women can prepare for the change by starting a healthy exercise, diet and lifestyle routine.

3 mins read

Pregnancy and Menopause

Menopause, which is sometimes referred to as “the change of life,” is a normal, natural part of the aging process for all women. It is defined as the end of fertility and is marked as having occurred 12 months after a woman’s final menstrual period. Menopause occurs after all the eggs in a woman’s ovaries have been exhausted, rendering a naturally occurring pregnancy impossible.

3 mins read

Pregnancy During Menopause

Shakespeare once declared that a man during his lifetime would play seven parts; the infant, the schoolboy, the lover, the soldier, the justice, the elder and second childhood. Shakespeare may not have written about it, but women play just as many parts and their bodies change dramatically during the different stages of their lives that include adolescence, which is marked by the onset of menstruation and fertility, and menopause, which signals the end of fertility.