Why are women’s bodies and their health so poorly understood and so often ignored, especially after their best baby-making years?
Great question. The good news is, information and truth are out there. The bad news is, so is a lot of nonsense, myth, and fear-mongering. The best news is, OvaryActive exists to get you answers about your body and what it’s up to.
Drs. Amy Voedisch and Rebecca Dunsmoor-Su know a lot about women’s bodies.
Both doctors are practicing ob/gyns with years of experience and knowledge. Both are champions of and advocates for women and their health, and both are really, REALLY tired of how women of all types have traditionally been treated by the healthcare industry.
In this first episode, the docs introduce themselves, give you their credentials so you know you’re getting accurate, up-to-date information, and explain why they’ve decided to take on perimenopause in their podcast.
If you have questions, if there are women in your life you care about (including yourself), if you want to enter perimenopause and menopause armed to protect your present and future health, listen, subscribe, rate, review, and share.
What you’ll hear:
[0:25] Meet Dr. Amy Voedisch – you can call her Amy
[1:08] Meet Dr. Rebecca Dunsmoor-Su
[2:10] Why focus on menopause and perimenopause?
[8:06] What you’ll hear in the Ovary-Active podcast
[10:50] Two core values in the Docs’ patient care
[12:42] The Docs are IN this with you
Follow the show @OvaryActive Instagram | YouTube
Meet the Docs:
More information about Dr. Rebecca Dunsmoor-Su:
Gennev: www.gennev.com/clinician/dr-rebecca-dunsmoor-su
LinkedIn @rebecca-dunsmoor-su
More information about Dr. Amy Voedisch:
Stanford Medical Clinic: stanfordhealthcare.org/doctors/v/amy-voedisch.html