La doctora Ana Cepin, especialista en obstetricia y ginecología, asegura que las vacunas contra el coronavirus en mujeres embarazadas son seguras y eficaces.
About one in seven women who give birth in the U.S. experience postpartum depression—a condition that can leave them exhausted and make it difficult for them to bond with their babies.
Graduating fellows and PGY-3 residents in the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology presented their final research projects at the annual Sloane Academic Assembly on Thursday, June 17, 2021.
In this first episode of a two-part series, Dr. Cara King talks to Dr. Jake Lauer about work transitions from residencies to fellowships into staff and vice versa.
If my therapist is reading this (and if she isn’t, do we have a problem?), she is about to learn that I spent part of our last phone session folding the laundry.
How long has it been since your last doctor’s visit, dental checkup, eye exam or skin cancer screening? For many women, the answer may be “circa 2019.”
Five hours after Sam got their second dose of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine, they got their period — about five days early in a cycle that's typically late.
In a new longitudinal study, a team of researchers provide concrete evidence that people whose mothers were significantly stressed during pregnancy respond differently to stress, 45 years later.
When Shana Clauson, a 45-year-old teacher in Hudson, Wis., was in line to get her first coronavirus vaccination on March 6, she logged onto Facebook to pass the time as she waited.