bad news guys, I just found out that my dreams and aspirations are lofty, which means I have to work hard
trying on a metaphor
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@chaosstudiesmed
bad news guys, I just found out that my dreams and aspirations are lofty, which means I have to work hard

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Hey, you, cis girl that's very (correctly) vocal about women being allowed to talk about their periods, do you include trans women in that?
I ask because every single time I've tried to talk about it to anyone that isn't a trans woman they get fucking angry. Which has caused me to have to just suffer in silence every single month. So I really relate to cis women when they talk about literally the exact same thing; being shamed by everyone around them their whole lives for talking about their periods, so they just suffer in silence every month as it negatively impacts their work and social lives. But I don't even feel like I can voice that I am literally dealing with the same exact thing because most of y'all react like you want to throw me in front of a bus for saying it, even those of you who act like your such big great transfem allies.
I guess I'll take this opportunity to talk about trans women periods. The first thing any tme person thinks when they hear this is always "how can trans women have periods? They don't have uteruses!"
The answer is: the uterus isn't what causes your period, it is effected by your period. What causes your period and what causes trans women's periods is the same thing: the endocrine system.
HRT changes the sex of your endocrine system. Feminizing HRT makes it a female endocrine system, giving us a 28-day hormone cycle just like cis women. At the end of that cycle, the hypothalamus floods the body with prostaglandins. Those are what cause all but one of the period symptoms, because they make muscles inflame and contract. They are what make the uterus shed its lining, they are what cause intestinal cramps, they are what cause body aches, they are what cause headaches and migraines. The only period symptom not causes by the release of prostaglandins throughout the body is depression, and that is caused by your endocrine system simply not processing as much estrogen and from simply feeling like shit.
So, the only symptoms trans women don't get every 28 days is menstrual cramps, because yes we do not menstruate since we don't have uteruses. But migraines, depression, body aches, intestinal cramps, and the infamous "period shits" don't exactly add up to us having any better of a time. Except we have to pretend that we're fine and nothing is different because no one believes that we get periods, not even cis women.
"But you can't call it a period then because that refers to MENSTRUATION!" is another one I hear all the time. This is incorrect. You use the word "period" instead of just "menstruation" because it doesn't just refer to menstruation. It refers to a period at the end of the hormone cycle where we experience a host of symptoms. And not all cis women experience all of the symptoms that encompass the period. Not all cis women get migraines, or body aches, or have severe depression. If a cis woman gets a hysterectomy she doesn't menstruate either! In that instance she experiences an identical period to what trans women experience. Yet, I doubt you'd insist that cis women who've had hysterectomies don't have periods.
Oh, another thing that I personally discovered after bottom surgery: vaginal odor changes for trans women during our periods too. I was not expecting that because I always thought it was just from menstruation. But nope, the ph levels of a trans woman's vagina are the same of as a cis woman's vagina, and it changes during our periods just the same.
mygame... <3
ok but i am gonna be the angry poc for 5 minutes bc i can praise my school a lot and i am generally happy w the culture and education that happens but i have noticed that when talking abt cv / diabetic / obesity issues and we have mock cases with pretend patients to go through, they're... always nonwhite... they're always indian... there's always something about them eating loads of junk food and binge drinking... they're always the angry and noncompliant patient... -_- it makes me mad. it makes me mad. it really does. i think i might bring it up but the thing is i can be the angry poc online but i worry about how this will be recieved by a bunch of white professors! but i think it is a bias and i have noticed it and my friends have noticed it and it pisses me off really bad. yes there is something to be said about demographics and common issues in certain populations but patterns are patterns and i don't like what is being subconsciously pushed.
sent this email. race solidarity cause why was the combative schizophrenic patient a young Black man. wtf. i take issue w the HIV pt being a Black woman as well solely for the reason of why are these the only two times that this race has come up. it just reads as so tone deaf and honestly downright offensive.
GET SHIT DONE
she called my email eloquent đđđđđđ
infodumped abt my good friend aneurin bevan to my MOTHER of all people today.. đ

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i love cytokines. go my dots
(from wikipedia; the tiny pink dots are cytokines ^_^)
all that purple...
i ran out of stuff to do AGAIN. so my next thought was ok well i guess i can just go over everything. đ
My Favourites
bone: clavicle
muscle: sartorius
nerve: vagus
organ: spleen
type of cytokine: interleukin
type of interleukin: 6
lamina of the spinal cord: V
part of brain: insular cortex
neurotransmitter: serotonin... :)
receptor: TLR4
ion channel: ASIC
bacteria: e. coli
virus: adenovirus
antibiotic: amoxicillin. obviously.
natural injury: intussusception
traumatic injury: compartment syndrome

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[falls into a chair, sighing dramatically] the nucleus accumbens is kinda like the dionysus of the brain
first aid kid =/= all home medical supplies you might want for general health and comfort
a first aid kit should prioritize severe bleeding controlâthat means wound-packing gauze and dressing (not band-aids) and something for pressureâand emergency rescue meds, which could vary depending on your household/your conditions and the context but should definitely include things like benedryl and aspirin and narcan if you can get it. survival shears for cutting clothing and bandages. you should also have a CAT tourniquet and spare 5-10 minutes learning how to use it from a YouTube video. itâs truly not difficult.
other stuff is great to have for convenience and quality of life but is not for life-saving emergencies and should therefore be of secondary importance. if it wonât kill someone before an ambulance can get there, itâs not your priority. if you can carry more, thatâs awesome, bring as much as you can.
âdonât use tourniquets because they can cause injuryâ again: five minutes on YouTube. five minutes on YouTube. take any stop the bleed course and EMTs are literally begging everyone to add tourniquets to their first aid kits because the risks are worth itâthe scenarios in which tourniquets are needed are scenarios in which the alternative is bleeding out and dying. tourniquet injuries are better than death.
âI donât need a real first aid kit because I donât have life-threatening emergencies or encounter people who doâ you exist in a world with cars. other shit too obviously but like. cars.
I just googled this and⌠yes, itâs absolutely real.
And there are so many articles and videos and discussions. Like, the scientific community is buzzing about this.
So much research will have to be redone because the data was absolutely compromised, off by orders of magnitude, by using standard lab gloves.
The world is probably not horrifically contaminated by microplastics. Sterile laboratories, however, are contaminated by latex and nitrile gloves.
Thank God someone bothered to check.
>I just googled this and⌠yes, itâs absolutely real.
Sources beyond dude just trust me, for the skeptics.
Scientists may have been unknowingly inflating microplastics pollution estimates, and the surprising source could be their own lab gloves. A
https://www.technologynetworks.com/applied-sciences/news/scientists-lab-gloves-may-be-causing-an-overestimation-of-microplastics-411138
Nitrile and latex gloves that scientists wear while they are measuring microplastics may lead to a potential overestimation of the tiny poll
Nitrile and latex gloves may cause overestimation of microplastics - Phys.org (itâs a pdf)
Researchers discovered a standard piece of lab equipment has added thousands of microplastic âfalse positivesâ per each square-millimeter un
Ordinary Lab Gloves May Have Skewed Microplastic Data: That doesnât mean microplastics arenât a problem, though
That should be enough
somehow this is one of the most confounding things i have encountered

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Drug arrives years after pandemicâs peak, but could still offer protection to vulnerable populations.
An antiviral pill has, for the first time, been shown to prevent COVID-19 in people exposed to the SARS-CoV-2 virus at home, according to trial results published today in the New England Journal of Medicine1. The drug could be a lifeline for those who still face real danger from the virus, such as care-home residents or transplant recipients on immune-suppressing medication.
There are good things happening in the world.
news about pcos today
Decades-long campaign powered by patient perspectives results in switch from PCOS â a name that caused confusion and undue suffering â to PM
a health policy paper has been published saying the name is officially updated to polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome (PMOS)
polyendocrine= multiple endocrine factors
metabolic = affecting/affected by metabolism
ovarian = from the ovaries
essentially, instead of using the symptomatic term (many people with PMOS do not develop cysts) the new term widens the diagnostic area and makes it easier to diagnose, treat, and do research on people with PMOS (even atypical types, such as no cysts).
it may seem like a waste of time to change a name instead of focusing on research, but for a lot of medical professionals a name can be associated with a hard set collection of symptoms, so the name needs to change to acknowledge that the disorder is not well understood and has a broader, subtler, and often missed set of symptoms. for example ADD is considered an antiquated/unused term, and now comes under the ADHD umbrella. in healthcare names and terminology changes all the time, and this is a positive change. your local healthcare professional may not know about this unless theyre really up on the news though!
in case you want to read about the name change process that was published in the Lancet (one of the most impactful and well respected medical journals):
Polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome (PMOS), previously named polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), affects one in eight women. However, the