Ready and present for class! One huge flahing light we all should see is that medical science and women's health gets 5% of funding for women's health research. Men's health gets so much more. They know so much more about testicular and prostate cancer than they do about ovarian cancer
I would say you are very adventurous and curious for moving to every continent except Antarctica. In the past, I might have said you were brave. This was a good video explaining the difference in caring…regarding Stress and Depression. Makes total sense. Thank you for another great lesson. ☺💕
Dear Taylor, can you do video on ROMA testing? I’ve got an ovarian cyst (found when being assessed for bleeding 5 years post menopause) and recently had ROMA done and ROMA score was 5.9% which I am told is low risk…and nothing to worry about. But am wondering if this is indeed true…..would love to know your opinion!
You need a consultation for this. I have to tailor it specifically to YOU and your situation. You can schedule at MenopauseTaylor.ME. More important than the ROMA result is the reason you had the ROMA in the first place. I will need all those details in the questionnaire you fill out after scheduling your consultation. All too often, doctors tell women, "Don't worry" when they should definitely worry! My goal is for you to understand everything completely. It's obvious that your doctors have not ensured that you understand everything completely.
Hi, I have a question for you... in one of your videos for Endometrial intraepithelial neoplasia (EIN), you say that this is cancer. Everything I have read says that this is not cancer, but is the precursor. Can you please clarify?
EIN is when there are some individual cancer CELLS that have not yet spread and behaved like cancer. So, it's cancer on the microscopic level, but not on the macroscopic level. Some would call it "Pre-Cancer."
but according to everything I read on the internet, including scientific studies, it says that there are abnormal changes to the cells, but it’s not cancer. According to some studies, some women can have EIN and never go on to have cancer. Can you respond to this information please. I think it’s really important to be clear on whether EIN is ‘cancer’ or not.
@@roxysimmons By definition, cancer is not cancer until it BEHAVES like cancer, which means the "cancer cells" get out of control. Think about it: Every cancer begins as a single cell. That one cell was once normal. But that one cell starts distorting. The more it distorts, the closer it gets to becoming a cancer cell. Once it becomes a cancer cell, it may remain as an isolated cancer cell. Or it can start reproducing wildly and BEHAVE like cancer. You would benefit greatly from watching my uUA-cam unit on "Cancer in General." It's videos # 309 - 318.
@ you are saying EIN is cancer and I think that is grossly misleading, especially as people who are looking for answers are going to come straight to the video and not think ‘oh what does Barb think about cancer cells, I’d better watch # xyz’, they are going to think ‘holy shit, I have EIN, she says I have CANCER!!’.
@@roxysimmons All "Intraepithelial Neoplasia (IN)" or "Carcinoma In Situ (CIS)" are cancer cells that have not behaved a cancer. I explain this is great detain in all the units on cancer: Cancer in General Uterine Cancer Cervical Cancer Breast Cancer Ovarian Cancer This is why I implore you to watch my videos in order. No soundbite is ever the whole story.
Ready and present for class!
One huge flahing light we all should see is that medical science and women's health gets 5% of funding for women's health research. Men's health gets so much more. They know so much more about testicular and prostate cancer than they do about ovarian cancer
Exactly right!
I never realized the correlation of these.
Thank you for all of your education and sharing it with the world.
You are ever so welcome, my dear!
I would say you are very adventurous and curious for moving to every continent except Antarctica. In the past, I might have said you were brave.
This was a good video explaining the difference in caring…regarding Stress and Depression. Makes total sense.
Thank you for another great lesson. ☺💕
I think "adventurous" is the right word.
Dear Taylor, can you do video on ROMA testing? I’ve got an ovarian cyst (found when being assessed for bleeding 5 years post menopause) and recently had ROMA done and ROMA score was 5.9% which I am told is low risk…and nothing to worry about. But am wondering if this is indeed true…..would love to know your opinion!
You need a consultation for this. I have to tailor it specifically to YOU and your situation. You can schedule at MenopauseTaylor.ME.
More important than the ROMA result is the reason you had the ROMA in the first place. I will need all those details in the questionnaire you fill out after scheduling your consultation.
All too often, doctors tell women, "Don't worry" when they should definitely worry! My goal is for you to understand everything completely. It's obvious that your doctors have not ensured that you understand everything completely.
Hi, I have a question for you... in one of your videos for Endometrial intraepithelial neoplasia (EIN), you say that this is cancer. Everything I have read says that this is not cancer, but is the precursor. Can you please clarify?
EIN is when there are some individual cancer CELLS that have not yet spread and behaved like cancer.
So, it's cancer on the microscopic level, but not on the macroscopic level. Some would call it "Pre-Cancer."
but according to everything I read on the internet, including scientific studies, it says that there are abnormal changes to the cells, but it’s not cancer. According to some studies, some women can have EIN and never go on to have cancer. Can you respond to this information please. I think it’s really important to be clear on whether EIN is ‘cancer’ or not.
@@roxysimmons By definition, cancer is not cancer until it BEHAVES like cancer, which means the "cancer cells" get out of control.
Think about it: Every cancer begins as a single cell. That one cell was once normal. But that one cell starts distorting. The more it distorts, the closer it gets to becoming a cancer cell.
Once it becomes a cancer cell, it may remain as an isolated cancer cell. Or it can start reproducing wildly and BEHAVE like cancer.
You would benefit greatly from watching my uUA-cam unit on "Cancer in General." It's videos # 309 - 318.
@ you are saying EIN is cancer and I think that is grossly misleading, especially as people who are looking for answers are going to come straight to the video and not think ‘oh what does Barb think about cancer cells, I’d better watch # xyz’, they are going to think ‘holy shit, I have EIN, she says I have CANCER!!’.
@@roxysimmons All "Intraepithelial Neoplasia (IN)" or "Carcinoma In Situ (CIS)" are cancer cells that have not behaved a cancer.
I explain this is great detain in all the units on cancer:
Cancer in General
Uterine Cancer
Cervical Cancer
Breast Cancer
Ovarian Cancer
This is why I implore you to watch my videos in order. No soundbite is ever the whole story.