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Dec 03, 2020 PM EST
Have you heard of cervical cancer? Get to know the disease to prevent yourself from getting it.
Sep 12, 2014 PM EDT
Happy wives are more important than happy husbands when it comes to keeping a marriage intact, according to a new study.
Sep 09, 2014 PM EDT
Teenage girls who skip school and fail tests have more sex and are less likely to use condoms compared to their more studious counterparts.
Sep 01, 2014 PM EDT
Half of young women can't locate their vagina, according to a new study.
Aug 07, 2014 PM EDT
Drinking coffee could prevent tinnitus, according to a new study.
Jul 31, 2014 PM EDT
Female soldiers and veterans are less likely than civilian women to drink alcohol, according to a new study.
Jul 16, 2014 PM EDT
Food impairs learning in obese women, according to a new study.
Jul 14, 2014 PM EDT
Posting sexy photographs on social media sites might make women seem less competent, according to a new study.
Jun 19, 2014 PM EDT
Depression doubles the risk of heart attack or premature death in young and middle-aged women, according to a new study.
May 05, 2014 PM EDT
Maternal mortality is down in most of the world. The bad news? The United States is among only eight countries in the world to see an increase in maternal mortality since 2003, according to a recent study.
May 05, 2014 AM EDT
When a wife is facing drastically declining health, the marriage is more likely to end in divorce, compared to marriages where the husband is sick, new research suggests.
May 02, 2014 PM EDT
Sleep quality may predict survival time in women with advanced breast cancer.
Apr 28, 2014 PM EDT
In light of remarkably low human papillomavirus infection rates in Australia, Australian health officials are proposing changing their recommendations for regular pap-smear screenings from every two years to every five years.
Apr 25, 2014 PM EDT
The United States Food and Drug Administration approved the first-ever DNA-based HPV test for women 25 years old and older as a primary diagnostic tool for cervical cancer screenings.
Apr 15, 2014 PM EDT
Researchers have determined that a single gene variant is responsible to giving aging women a much higher risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, compared to men of the same age.