Home Actress Jen Gunter HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers April 2024 Jen Gunter Instagram - Love this pharmacy vending machine at USC! No GYNO crap to be found! Instead, birth control pills, plan B, condoms, tampons, COVID tests, and hydrocortisone (the thing to use in a pinch for a bad vulvar itch instead of Vagisil, the devil’s own sav. (Vagisil has benzocaine and this can cause allergic reactions and irritation. And we hate Vagisil because of they are a massive part of the feminine hygiene industry invested in the messaging that women smell).

Jen Gunter Instagram – Love this pharmacy vending machine at USC! No GYNO crap to be found! Instead, birth control pills, plan B, condoms, tampons, COVID tests, and hydrocortisone (the thing to use in a pinch for a bad vulvar itch instead of Vagisil, the devil’s own sav. (Vagisil has benzocaine and this can cause allergic reactions and irritation. And we hate Vagisil because of they are a massive part of the feminine hygiene industry invested in the messaging that women smell).

Jen Gunter Instagram - Love this pharmacy vending machine at USC! No GYNO crap to be found! Instead, birth control pills, plan B, condoms, tampons, COVID tests, and hydrocortisone (the thing to use in a pinch for a bad vulvar itch instead of Vagisil, the devil’s own sav. (Vagisil has benzocaine and this can cause allergic reactions and irritation. And we hate Vagisil because of they are a massive part of the feminine hygiene industry invested in the messaging that women smell).

Jen Gunter Instagram – Love this pharmacy vending machine at USC! No GYNO crap to be found!

Instead, birth control pills, plan B, condoms, tampons, COVID tests, and hydrocortisone (the thing to use in a pinch for a bad vulvar itch instead of Vagisil, the devil’s own sav. (Vagisil has benzocaine and this can cause allergic reactions and irritation. And we hate Vagisil because of they are a massive part of the feminine hygiene industry invested in the messaging that women smell). | Posted on 22/Apr/2024 08:52:42

Jen Gunter Instagram – I made the mistake of accidentally googling myself…

Calling out people who sell unregulated, untested pharmaceuticals (supplements with health claims, not products like prenatal vitamins or iron for iron deficiency) seems to get people mad. Like really mad. I’ve been doing this for ages (hello GOOP) and have been pretty vocal about how these people are making money hand over fist for products that are not recommended in guidelines and often have little to no (it is usually no) data to support their use. Remember, if the data were good they would be in the guidelines! Whether it is a company, celebrity, medical doctor, naturopath, chiropractor, PhD, nurse…ok you get the picture…doesn’t matter. It irks me to no end that people give their heard earned money for false promises…false promises that may also net them liver injury to boot. So why now all of a sudden people are hot about it is fascinating to me. I’ve called out numerous prenatal vitamins, the liver shield, menopause supplements, probiotics etc. I have some theories, and I’m sure I will write about it at some point. 

Thinking I’m mean, the person not making money from supplements, for pointing out the dismal research, safety issues, and overall grift is a weird flex. No one likes to be led astray. But really, shouldn’t the anger be directed at the people making tens or hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars from selling products with dismal data? 

Being appropriately confident is just that. And I’m not going to lie to you to oversell things for attention. Women’s health has too long been a pendulum where something is new and amazing or essential and pushed on everyone or it’s the opposite. I want to help women with data and, when that is absent, experience, not trends. Because that is the kind of care that I want. 

I’m not looking for anything in reply. But if you are hate following me, maybe reconsider. Life is too short for that. And please don’t go looking for the sub-Reddit. I just found the 3 buckets really fascinating, and I bet some of you will as well! 

Also, it has just spurred me on to write about more supplements! 

As you were!
Jen Gunter Instagram – Thought I would share this bone density screening info that I posted on threads. It seems there are people recommending baseline DXA (bone density) scans for all women in their 30s and 40s, but screening under age 65 is risk based. 

For people age 50 and older we screen earlier than 65 based on weight, history of parental hip fracture, and if someone smokes. There are other risk factors to include as well, and a variety of medical conditions and medications that would promote earlier screening. For example, anyone with primary ovarian insufficiency should get a bone scan when they are diagnosed as should people with relative energy deficiency of sports (REDs). 

When to screen under age 50 depends primarily on risk factors. 

Other tools to help determine risk and if you ahold be screened earlier are FRAX and OST and if you Google them, you should find the calculators. 

For people with no risk factors, screening earlier isn’t recommended.

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