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Kelli's avatar

Number 12 fascinates me. (quoted below)

I know a number of elderly women who had hysterectomies earlier in life. These individuals are callous people at their best, and full-out sociopathic at their worst.

Society is experiencing a "loss of empathy" on an epic scale.

Makes me wonder if the loss of hormones (that contribute to nurturing, etc.) is part of that?!

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"12. In your opinion, what are the long-term implications of hysterectomy and oophorectomy that women might not be fully aware of when they consent to surgery?

They are not told that their lives will be shorter, that they will suffer more from osteoporosis, that they may never have restorative sleep again, that they will suffer the loss of muscle mass from the lost testosterone, that they will be anxious, enraged, panicky and perhaps diagnosed with a mental illness, that they will be offered a long list of pharmaceuticals for symptom relief which will fail them, that their bodies will suffer with pain and the list goes on."

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Robert Yoho, MD's avatar

This sums it up:

In your opinion, what are the long-term implications of hysterectomy and oophorectomy that women might not be fully aware of when they consent to surgery?

They are not told that their lives will be shorter, that they will suffer more from osteoporosis, that they may never have restorative sleep again, that they will suffer the loss of muscle mass from the lost testosterone, that they will be anxious, enraged, panicky and perhaps diagnosed with a mental illness, that they will be offered a long list of pharmaceuticals for symptom relief which will fail them, that their bodies will suffer with pain and the list goes on.

I wrote a book about this subject, Hormone Secrets. The free download is here or you can buy a hard copy on Amazon. https://dl.bookfunnel.com/p7dvqow83g

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