Hear are the trends we spotted this week in women’s health, and as always, scroll for the top clicked stories.
🧪 Medical officials endorsing *at-home* cervical cancer screening is a big deal, not just because it can widen access, but because it saves women time and skips the logistical burden that keeps so many from getting screened in the first place. It’s a quality-of-life upgrade, and the media coverage still doesn’t match how much time and hassle this could save.
⚠️ ProPublica reminded us that women are still dying due to abortions bans, this time a Texas mother who was denied an abortion despite pre-existing conditions that made pregnancy extraordinarily dangerous. And NEJM had a piece restating that SSRIs are safe in pregnancy, especially when “confounding” (like previous depression, etc.) is properly controlled. This was necessary after the Trump administration held an FDA committee meeting essentially pushing that SSRIs are unsafe.
🚗 And I still can’t go over this week’s “we’re just doing this now?” moment: the US finally approved a female crash-test dummy for the driver’s seat, decades after we knew women were more likely to be severely injured or killed in crashes.