| Most
    Women Would Accept More Mammograms.  [United States] Despite the inconvenience
    and anxiety of being recalled for a repeat mammogram after a questionable finding, most
    women would willingly undergo additional tests if this would result in even a slightly
    increased chance of earlier breast cancer detection, a new survey shows.
     "Overall, we found that women who responded overwhelmingly preferred this
    trade-off," Dr. David Gur and his colleagues report.  Guidelines urge
    radiologists to keep their recall rates at or below 10 percent in order to reduce costs
    and prevent unnecessary anxiety among women undergoing the screening test, the researchers
    note, but there has been very little research on what the preferences of the women
    themselves might be.  "Given the fact that mammography is not a perfect
    procedure and is not likely to become one, the need to involve women in the
    decision-making process concerning their own health may be obvious to some yet is
    frequently not met," write Gur, at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, and
    colleagues in their report in the journal Radiology. | 
  
    | Obesity,
    Estrogen Breakdown Tied to Breast Cancer.  [United States] Among women not using
    hormone therapy, obesity and the byproducts of estrogen breakdown appear to raise the risk
    of breast cancer, according to findings published in the International Journal of Cancer.
      "Hormone therapy and body mass index (BMI) have been associated with
    postmenopausal breast cancer," Dr. Francesmary Modugno, of the University of Pittsburgh,
    and colleagues write.  "Because estrogen metabolism may affect breast cancer
    risk and can be altered by weight and hormone therapy, it might play a role in the hormone
    therapy-BMI-breast cancer associations."  BMI is the ratio of body weight and
    height, and a score of 30 or higher is considered obese. | 
  
    | The
    Truth About Women and Heart Disease.  [United States] Yes, it's more common than
    you may think.  No, it's not inevitable.  WebMD teamed up with experts at The
    Cleveland Clinic to bring you the latest on women and heart disease.  Risk 1: The
    Cholesterol Connection.  Risk 2: Why
    Blood Pressure Matters.  Risk 3:
    Your Diet and Weight. Risk 4:
    Exercise For A Healthy Heart. | 
  
    | Women Fail to See Bone Risk.
     [Scotland] Women 
are failing to appreciate the dangers of osteoporosis or hip
    fractures, a new study has found.  A survey carried out by the Alliance for Better
    Bone Health found only three per cent of Edinburgh 
women said they were worried about
    developing the debilitating bone condition osteoporosis.  Less than a fifth of those
    quizzed told researchers they were worried about suffering a fall later in life. | 
  
    | Gee,
    Women Have ... a Prostate?  [United States] Due to overwhelming interest, we're
    going to return to the G spot  a region of female anatomy associated with orgasm and
    occasionally ejaculation.  After my last column on the G spot ran last month, quite a
    few men wrote in or called.  Several said they were older than 60 and they sounded as
    if they'd been with enough women to have put together statistically significant scientific
    studies on female sexual response.  These guys for the most part wanted to express
    wonder at the great diversity nature bestows on the female body.  Those who reported
    they'd witnessed an ejaculatory event may have rubbed up against a woman's prostate.
     That's not a typo.  In 2002, what was once an obscure female anatomical feature
    known as the paraurethral glands, or Skene's glands, was officially renamed the prostate
    by the Federative International Committee on Anatomical Terminology.  To understand
    why women would have prostate glands, it helps to go back to our embryonic beginnings,
    when everything was taking shape.  Popular wisdom says we all start life as female
    embryos, but scientists say we really begin as blended male-female beings.  "You
    actually have the plumbing for both genders in the early embryos," says 
University of
    Pennsylvania developmental biologist Patricia 
Labosky.  At eight weeks, males and
    females both have a proto penis and a proto prostate.  After that point, depending on
    whether your chromosomes say you're male or female, some parts grow and develop and others
    degenerate.  A few develop in different ways in both sexes:  In girls, what
    would become the penis instead grows into its sister organ, the clitoris.  And what
    would become the male prostate becomes the female prostate.  Just as the male
    prostate produces the fluid that carries sperm to their various destinations, the female
    version sometimes creates an ejaculation of fluid if rubbed the right way  through
    the G spot. | 
  
    | Women's Health Declines.
     [China] Chinese 
women's health situation has declined slightly in the past decade,
    according to a report released by the China Women Research Institute.  "This is
    caused by the growing gender imbalance among newborns, the high death rate of baby girls,
    and high death toll of pregnant women in some areas," said the Report on China Gender
    Equality and Women Development: 1995-2005, also called the green book on women.  The
    average death rate of pregnant women declined from 61.9 in 100,000 in 1995 to 48.3 in
    100,000 in 2004.  However, the book said, the regional disparity is alarming.
     In remote ethnic minority areas, such as the Tibet Autonomous Region, Xinjiang Uygur
    Autonomous Region and Qinghai 
Province, the maternity death rates all exceed 100 in
    100,000, with the highest being 310.4 in 100,000.  The number of health centers for
    women and children has dropped sharply in the past decade.  The report said such
    centers amounted to 3,179 in 1995, but 2,998 in 2004.  "The decline will
    unavoidably weaken the health services provided for women," the report said.  In
    the past several years, the number of women taking gynaecological check-ups remained
    comparatively low, lingering between 38 percent to 39 percent, said the report.  The
    book, dubbed China's 
first comprehensive report on gender equality and women development,
    claims that development of women is based on gender equality and equality is based on the
    mutual development of both sexes.  It evaluated women's development nationwide in
    terms of health, education, economy, politics and decision-making, family and
    surroundings. | 
  
    | Silent
    Struggles in the Womb.  [United 
States] Pregnancy can be the most wonderful
    experience life has to offer.  But it can also be dangerous.  Around the world,
    an estimated 529,000 women a year die during pregnancy or childbirth.  Ten million
    suffer injuries, infection or disability.  To David Haig, an evolutionary biologist
    at Harvard, these grim statistics raise a profound puzzle about pregnancy.
     "Pregnancy is absolutely central to reproduction, and yet pregnancy doesn't
    seem to work very well," he said.  "If you think about the heart or the
    kidney, they're wonderful bits of engineering that work day in and day out for years and
    years.  But pregnancy is associated with all sorts of medical problems.  What's
    the difference?"  The difference is that the heart and the kidney belong to a
    single individual, while pregnancy is a two-person operation.  And this operation
    does not run in perfect harmony.  Instead, Haig argues, a mother and her unborn child
    engage in an unconscious struggle over the nutrients she will provide it.  Haig's
    theory has been gaining support in recent years, as scientists examine the various ways
    pregnancy can go wrong.  His theory also explains a baffling feature of developing
    fetuses: the copies of some genes are shut down, depending on which parent they come from.
     Haig has also argued that the same evolutionary conflicts can linger on after birth
    and even influence the adult brain.  New research has offered support to this idea as
    well.  By understanding these hidden struggles, scientists may be able to better
    understand psychological disorders like depression and autism. | 
  
    | Study Finds Limitations of
    Gene Test for Cancer.  [United 
States] The widely used genetic test for breast
    cancer risk can miss mutations that help cause the disease, according to a new study in
    the United States, a finding 
that is likely to increase the pressure to develop more
    thorough testing methods.  The test, which looks for mutations in genes called BRCA1
    and BRCA2, missed them in about 12 percent of breast cancer patients from families with
    multiple cases of breast or ovarian cancer, according to the 
study's authors at the University
    of Washington.  Experts cautioned 
that the chances of such false negative results
    were much smaller for women who were not from such high-risk families, so that most women
    who tested negative had little cause for concern.  Also, if a woman is tested for the
    same specific mutation her mother has, the test is not likely to miss it if it is there.
      Still, experts said women in families with multiple cases of breast and ovarian
    cancer should take precautions as if they had a mutation, even if none was found. | 
  
    | New Pill May Cut
    Breast Cancer Risk and Eliminate PMS.  [Scotland] A contraceptive pill that may
    reduce the risk of breast cancer and heart disease and eliminate periods could be
    available within the next five to 10 years.  Scientists believe the development could
    transform the lives of millions of women and would be safer than current forms of oral
    contraception, which carry a higher risk of breast cancer and heart problems.  The
    new Pill could also bring an end to the problem of premenstrual syndrome and other painful
    gynaecological conditions such as endometriosis.  But experts warned that progress on
    developing the new contraceptive is being hampered by political pressure from pro-life
    groups and the Bush administration in the US, who object to the fact it works in the same
    way as the so-called abortion pill.  At a conference to mark the 50th anniversary of
    the development of the Pill this year, Professor David Baird, emeritus professor of
    reproductive endocrinology at the University 
of Edinburgh, revealed that his team was
    testing the new compound on small groups of women in clinical trials.  Three other
    teams - in Sweden, Chile and the US - are also working on similar projects
 involving the
    same class of compounds.  The current combined Pill, which is taken by more than two
    million women in the UK, 
uses oestrogen and progesterone to stop ovulation and prevent
    pregnancy.  But oestrogen can increase the risk of breast cancer and cardiovascular
    problems such as deep vein thrombosis.  Studies have shown that women who take the
    Pill have a 24 per cent increased risk of breast cancer, although scientists have pointed
    out that only a tiny number more will be diagnosed with the disease as a result. | 
  
    | A Contraceptive Pill That
    Can Beat Cancer.  [Scotland] A new
generation of contraceptive medication that
    guards against breast cancer as well as pregnancy could be available within five years,
    scientists predicted yesterday.  Patient trials of a drug that is used in higher
    doses to cause abortions have shown it to be an effective contraceptive with few
    side-effects, and animal and cell models have even suggested that it can protect against
    breast tumors.  Women taking the new Pill, which contains no female hormones, would
    have no periods and would thus be unlikely to suffer from pre-menstrual syndrome (PMS).
      The contraceptive is also thought to carry a lower risk of blood clots than
    existing varieties.  If the early results are confirmed by larger studies, the
    research, led by the University 
of Edinburgh, would provide millions of women with a safe,
    reliable way of controlling fertility.  While the Pill is the most effective form of
    contraception, many are put off by side-effects from the female hormones on which it is
    based. |