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The Thyroid Hormone Breakthrough: Overcoming Sexual and Hormonal Problems at Every Age

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Book Overview

If you're one of the millions of American women suffering from PMS, irregular periods, difficulty getting pregnant, low sex drive, postpartum depression, menopausal symptoms, or many other hormonal... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Another Great Book

The Thyroid Hormone Breakthrough is another great book from Mary Shomon. In a world where information is cheap, this book is gold. A doctor doesn't always provide the fullest information and they may not have time to answer the questions you thought of after you left. This book will answer those questions and more. The book is easy to read, packed with information and is exactly what we all look for when we need help - the thoroughly informed best friend who has been there. This book provides good basic background on the thyroid and moves quickly on to good information about diagnosing thyroid conditions along with options and an extensive symptoms checklist. There is great information on a wide variety of hormonal issues, fertility and pregnancy problems and menopause as well as tons of resources such as websites, professional oranizations, books and newsletters dealing with all these issues. Everything you want to know from a writer you can trust.

Thank you and brava!

Medical issues can be terribly confusing, especially when dealing with more than one. Who has time to search and search for reliable information? Shomon has done it again by providing both information and empowering advice in "The Thyroid Hormone Breakthrough." "The Thyroid Hormone Breakthrough" is written clearly, concisely, and personably. It makes sense of a complex and confusing subject in a style that makes it easy to understand and retain the information presented. The charts, checklists, lists of symptoms, and resources section make it more than a book -- they make it a valuable tool. It's clear that Shomon not only has the knowledge and talent to write this book; she really cares. It will be my pleasure to recommend this book to any patient who contacts me and needs information or support in this area. Thank you, Mary Shomon, and brava! You've done it again.

Medical Professionals Give Full Support to this Book!

Once again, Mary Shomon has worked miracles. This book provides current and excellent information about thyroid care as related to hormone balance. As a practicing Doctor-Nurse team, we are longstanding supporters of Mary's incredible advocacy work, and feel that this book should be read by anyone who knows or suspects they have a thyroid problem and would like more help in finding hormone balance. The interactions between thyroid and sex hormones is a crucial topic that can help millions feel better fast. A great many people who are being treated for sex hormone imbalance or other common conditions like overweight, blood sugar, blood pressure, infertility, menstrual problems -= will learn information that can help you to feel better and lead a fuller life. Richard L. Shames MD, Harvard-trained MD with 30 years practice experience Karilee H. Shames PhD, RN - Walter Reed/ University of Maryland Advance Practice Nurse/Nursing Professor Authors FEELING FAT, FUZZY OR FRAZZLED Medical Practice in San Rafael, CA

Empowering Patients

I am drawn to Mary Shomon's books as an historian. I tell my classes each semester that in the late 19th century and early 20th century that the most diagnosed disease supposedly plaguing women was variously described as " neuresthenia" or "hysteria." The symptoms attributed to this disorder were as diverse as the patients diagnosed as suffering from it. Patients suffered from hysteria if they ate too much or too little, slept too much or too little, if they were sexually hyperactive or frigid, if they were irritable or passive. Of course, taken together the symptoms could describe every person who has ever lived at some point in their lives. Doctors attributed this widespread condition to the supposed weakness of women's physical and mental constitutions. Believing their female patients to be frail and sick by nature, the male medical profession missed the link between their female patients' suffering and the likely anger and depression they experienced from prevalent sexism, career discrimination, limited educational opportunities and the frustration stemming from men's sexual ignorance. The disease "hysteria" or " neuresthenia" was a product of the exclusively male medical fraternity's gender ideology, the belief that women's bodies were deficient, inferior versions of the male anatomy, ever-prone to break down. As the sexual component of hysteria became more widely acknowledged by the 1920s and 1930s, it suddenly disappeared as a diagnosis and became a medical fossil like phrenology. I tell this story because doctors too often refuse to acknowledge that their science is not always a cold, clear-eyed analysis of objective reality but that they, too, are products of a sexist, racist culture and that these attitudes shape how they perceive their patients and diagnose their symptoms. This is why Mary Shomon's works have been so fascinating to me. Ms. Shomon has made a career of uncovering the mythologies surrounding one of the most common, and under-diagnosed maladies affecting women's health in the late 20th and early 21st centuries: hypothyroidism. As Mary points out in several of her works, most doctors continue to base their diagnosis of thyroid disease exclusively on the numeric values derived from a Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH) blood test. Most doctors, Mary writes in her new book "The Thyroid Hormone Breakthrough," will tell patients, "Just one blood test and we'll find out what we need to know." If patients don't fall within the numeric values defined as indicating thyroid disease, doctors will ignore other convincing signs of thyroid illness, such as weight gain, hair loss, and a family history of thyroid illness. Such doctors will dismiss the patient (usually a woman) as a victim of hypochondria or depression. Incipient in this attitude is the idea that neurosis is the normal mental state of women, who certainly can't be trusted to know if their bodies are healthy or not. Because of these attitudes, Mary p
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