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Period Products

Sanitary Disposal Units - 0 views

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    Sanitary Disposal Units are placed in bathroom stalls to dispose of sanitary napkins and tampons.
Period Products

Menstruation and the Menstrual Cycle - 0 views

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    In the United States, the average age is 12. This does not mean that all girls start at the same age. A girl can start her period anytime between the ages of eight and 15. Usually, the first period starts about two years after breasts first start to grow. If a girl has not had her first period by age 15, or if it has been more than two to three years since breast growth started, she should see a doctor.
Period Products

Feminine Sanitary Disposal - 0 views

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    Feminine Sanitary Disposal includes sanitary disposal bag dispensers, sanitary disposal bags, sanitary disposal signs and sanitary disposal units.
Franklin Aguas

Straightforward Abortion Facts - 0 views

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    Over the past few years abortion rights have been a hot topic in the U.S., leading to clinic closures all over the country. The fact remains, however, that in the United States, abortion is not only legal, but a right. Deciding to have an abortion is very difficult. Here are some abortion facts that a woman can consider in order to make an informed decision.
Franklin Aguas

Permanent Birth Control Options For Women - 0 views

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    In the United States an estimated 62 million women between the ages of 15 to 44 are on some type of birth control. According to the Guttmacher Institute, the typical female in America wants to have two children. "To achieve this goal," according to the policy analysis organization, "she must use contraceptives for roughly three decades." For that reason, permanent birth control is a good option for women and couples who are satisfied with the number of children in their family and do not want to get pregnant again.
Robin Fenti

Feminine Products for Menopause - 0 views

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    Menopause is a natural process marking the end of a woman's period of fertility. In the United States, the average age of menopause is 51. It is not uncommon, however, for some women to start menopause in their 40s. While certain women may be happy about finishing their menstrual cycle, menopause does have some significant and uncomfortable side effects, from sleeplessness to mood swings and hot flashes. The good news is that there's a slew of physician designed and approved natural feminine products developed specifically for the purpose of decreasing and easing menopausal symptoms.
Elisa Maser

Gender can cost you in individual health insurance - Los Angeles Times - 0 views

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    Gender can cost you in individual health insurance June 22, 2008 When it comes to health insurance, Valencia resident Tova Hack's first problem is that she works part time and thus needs an individual policy for medical coverage because her employer doesn't offer one. Her second problem is that she's a woman. Ads by Google / Ad Feedback * Blue Cross Blue ShieldHealth insurance plans as low as $4/day. Call 1-8... FREE! www.Vimo.com * Individual BlueSave Big on Health Insurance Rates- Get Affordable Brand Name Care Now! www.YourFreeQuotes.com * Nevada Health PlansFree health insurance quotes! Find the right plan and apply online. www.GoHealthInsurance.com * Blue Cross Short Term InsHealth Insurance Quotes Online from Blue Cross. Plans from $50 month. www.healthinsurancesort.com Hack, 22, a grad student at Cal State Northridge, is insured by Blue Shield of California. She just found out that the cost of her bare-bones, high-deductible insurance plan is going up 20%, to $119 a month from $99. But the real surprise -- which Blue Shield neglected to point out in its recent letters to individual policyholders but which was apparent from a close reading of an accompanying chart -- is that men and women will now be charged different rates. The change takes effect July 1. "I don't think it's fair at all," said Hack. "I'm in perfectly fine health." That may be. But as far as Blue Shield is concerned, Hack and all other women are somehow more accident-prone, or more likely to break a bone, or more susceptible to costly ailments. Why? Because they're women. "Our egghead actuaries crunched the numbers based on all the data we have about healthcare," explained Tom Epstein, a Blue Shield spokesman. "This is what they found." That women get sicker than men? "It's all about the statistics," Epstein said. It's not about pregnancy, though. Hack's policy doesn't even cover pregnancy and maternity care. No, this is purely a matter of Blue Shield deciding t
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    Gender can cost you in individual health insurance June 22, 2008 When it comes to health insurance, Valencia resident Tova Hack's first problem is that she works part time and thus needs an individual policy for medical coverage because her employer doesn't offer one. Her second problem is that she's a woman. Ads by Google / Ad Feedback * Blue Cross Blue ShieldHealth insurance plans as low as $4/day. Call 1-8... FREE! www.Vimo.com * Individual BlueSave Big on Health Insurance Rates- Get Affordable Brand Name Care Now! www.YourFreeQuotes.com * Nevada Health PlansFree health insurance quotes! Find the right plan and apply online. www.GoHealthInsurance.com * Blue Cross Short Term InsHealth Insurance Quotes Online from Blue Cross. Plans from $50 month. www.healthinsurancesort.com Hack, 22, a grad student at Cal State Northridge, is insured by Blue Shield of California. She just found out that the cost of her bare-bones, high-deductible insurance plan is going up 20%, to $119 a month from $99. But the real surprise -- which Blue Shield neglected to point out in its recent letters to individual policyholders but which was apparent from a close reading of an accompanying chart -- is that men and women will now be charged different rates. The change takes effect July 1. "I don't think it's fair at all," said Hack. "I'm in perfectly fine health." That may be. But as far as Blue Shield is concerned, Hack and all other women are somehow more accident-prone, or more likely to break a bone, or more susceptible to costly ailments. Why? Because they're women. "Our egghead actuaries crunched the numbers based on all the data we have about healthcare," explained Tom Epstein, a Blue Shield spokesman. "This is what they found." That women get sicker than men? "It's all about the statistics," Epstein said. It's not about pregnancy, though. Hack's policy doesn't even cover pregnancy and maternity care. No, this is purely a matter of Blue Shield deciding t
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