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text 2021-11-16 10:59
8 Common Myths About STDs That Should Be Addressed ASAP

 

Sexually transmitted diseases are infections and viruses that can be passed through unprotected sexual intercourse. Even though STDs are quite serious, many people neglect them or believe in various myths. But it is essential to understand that STDs are real and can cause significant damage. That’s why we have gathered these eight common myths about STDs that should be addressed ASAP.

 

1. STDs are rare

There is a common misconception that it is not easy to get STDs since they are rare and only a few people have them. But the reality is that up to 20 million new STDs occur every year. Moreover, many people with STDs don't seek medical attention. This means that they are not included in the statistics.

 

2. STDs always cause obvious symptoms

Many people think that STDs always cause obvious symptoms and if their partners are infected, they will notice signs of STDs. Unfortunately, STDs may develop asymptomatically or cause mild symptoms for years. Additionally, women are more susceptible to STDs and usually have more pronounced symptoms. Nevertheless, it is almost impossible to know for sure whether a person is infected with STDs or not. 

 

3. Douching helps prevent STDs

Some women believe that douching right after sex can help prevent pregnancy and STDs. But the truth is that douching can even promote conception since the sperm is transported higher. Additionally, douching doesn’t prevent STD transmission. On the contrary, it can provoke the development of bacterial vaginosis since it disrupts normal vaginal flora.

 

4. STDs can be left untreated

If you have noticed any symptoms of STDs or have had unprotected sex recently, it is better to undergo STD testing and treat your condition if needed. The point is that untreated STDs can cause severe complications. Untreated STDs can lead to pelvic inflammatory disease, reduced life expectancy, different types of cancer, and infertility. 

 

5. All STDs are curable

Even though most infections that can be transmitted through unprotected sex can be easily treated with the help of antibiotics, some STDs are not curable. For example, hepatitis B, herpes simplex virus HIV, and human papillomavirus (HPV) can’t be cured. However, timely and proper treatment and managing your condition can help ease their symptoms and prevent the development of severe complications.

 

6. STDs are passed only through unprotected vaginal sex

It is important to understand that STDs can be passed through the body fluids (like blood, lubrications, sperm, and even saliva) and skin-to-skin contact. This means that STDs can be transmitted during any type of intercourse (vaginal, anal, or oral). Additionally, some STDs can also be passed through kissing and petting. 

 

7. All types of contraception can prevent STDs

Many people believe that both barrier and hormonal contraception options can help the transmission of STDs. Unfortunately, only male and female condoms can decrease your risk of getting STDs but they still don’t eliminate it. So if you use any other type of contraception, it is better to complement it with condoms. 

 

8. You can get immunity to STDs

There is a common myth that people who have been successfully treated for STDs can’t get reinfected. However, people can’t develop immunity to STDs. That means that you can easily get STDs right after treatment and during your lifetime. So if you have been diagnosed and treated for STDs, your partners should also get tested. 

 

The bottom line

Even though STDs may not manifest themselves through severe symptoms, you still need to understand that they are extremely common. That’s why it is essential to use condoms during sex and get tested for STDs on a regular basis. Additionally, you need to visit a doctor in case of any unusual symptoms. Timely and proper treatment can help prevent the development of serious complications. 

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text 2020-03-25 13:31
Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Testing Devices Market Global Trends, Market Share, Industry Size, Growth, Opportunities, and Market Forecast 2020 to 2027

Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Testing Devices Market is estimated to value over USD xx billion by 2027 end and register a CAGR of over xx % during the forecast period 2020 to 2027.

The report initiates from the outline of business surroundings and explains the commercial summary of chain structure. Moreover, it analyses forecast By Product Type, By Application, by Region and Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Testing Devices Market Size.

Additionally, this report illustrates the corporate profiles and situation of competitive landscape amongst numerous associated corporations including the analysis of market evaluation and options associated with the worth chain. This report provides valuable insights into the general market profit through a profit graph, an in-depth SWOT analysis of the market trends alongside the regional proliferation of this business vertical.

Request a Sample Report @ https://www.futurewiseresearch.com/request-sample.aspx?id=3813&page=requestsample

 

Market Segmentation:

This Market is divided by Product, by Application, by Distribution and By Region.

Regionally, the worldwide Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Testing Devices market is fragmented as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and also the rest of the world.

 

Key Market Players :

  • Roche Diagnostics
  • Bomerieux
  • Hologic, Inc.
  • Becton Dickinson & Company
  • Cepheid, Inc.
  • Danaher Corporation
  • Affymetrix, Inc.
  • Abbott Laboratories
  • Alere, Inc.
  • DiaSorin

Note: The list of the key players are going to be updated with the most recent market scenario and trends)

Purchase a Copy & Ask For Discount: https://www.futurewiseresearch.com/request-sample.aspx?id=3813&page=askfordiscount

FutureWise Key Takeaways:

  • Growth prospects
  • SWOT analysis
  • Key trends
  • Key data-points touching market growth

Competitive Landscape:

  • Tier 1 players- well-established companies in the market accounting a major market share
  • Tier 2 players
  • Rapidly growing players
  • New Entrants

 

Objectives of the Study:

  • To offer a complete analysis of the Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Testing Devices Market by Product, by Application, by Distribution, and by region.
  • To cater to comprehensive data on factors impacting market growth (drivers, restraints, opportunities, and industry-specific restraints)
  • To measure and forecast micro-markets and also the overall market
  • To predict the market size, in key regions — North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and Rest of the world
  • To record and evaluate the competitive landscape mapping - product launches, technological advancements, mergers and expansions

 

 

Browse Corresponding Healthcare Market Research Reports & Consulting

  • Nitinol-based Medical Device Market is forecasted to value over USD xx billion by 2027 end and register a CAGR of xx% from the forecast period 2020-2027.
  • Inhaled Nitric Oxide Market is projected to achieve significant growth by the end of the forecast period as per the research study conducted by FutureWise research analysts.

 

Flexible Delivery Model:

  • We have a flexible delivery model and you can suggest changes in the scope/table of content as per your requirement
  • The customization services offered are free of charge with the purchase of any license of the report.
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Company Name: FutureWise Research

Contact Person:  Vinay Thaploo

Email: sales@futurewiseresearch.com

Phone: +44 141 628 9353 / +1 347 709 4931

City:  Leeds

Country:  United Kingdom

Website: www.futurewiseresearch.com

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review SPOILER ALERT! 2015-05-09 19:21
Virgin by Radhika Sanghani
V!RG!N - Radhika Sanghani

If you don’t take this book seriously it is a fun fast paced read. A book that openly talks about dating, drinking, sex, masturbation, reproductive organs, body fluids, etc. in the college environment. Clearly a book for the college audience. But I am past my college years and even though I can’t deny that it had its funny parts, the final message or the concept of the novel ended up bothering more than I thought making it only an OK read (2 stars). But I’ll get to that later.

 

The synopsis sounded fun but what made me decide to read this book was JOAN RIVERS (may she rest in peace). I mean if a comedian like Ms. Rivers recommends this book, it must be something funny that can be missed. Kudos to the marketing people for getting Ms. Rivers’ quote.

 

Virgin is the story of Ellie Kolstakis, a 21-year-old senior in college who holds an embarrassing-to-her secret: she is a virgin and it absolutely shames her to be one.

Ellie blames her virginity on her “controlling” parents, her plain looks, and a boy named James Martell who had the sense of telling her that her first time should be special and that he was not going to be the one to ruin it for her. Somehow that traumatized her and she never did anything to change the status of her hymen after that.

 

But now that she’s a senior she decides it’s her last chance to change that once and for all. So she makes it her goal to lose her virginity before graduation. I usually write spoiler free reviews but with this one I can’t. Long-story short, she finally has sex with the wrong guy and ends up getting chlamydia, which she thinks is fine and dandy because she finally can have the words “sexually active” on her medical records, she can “happily” ask for an STD test on her doctor’s appointment and “everybody has it”.

 

Like I said in the beginning of this review, if you don’t take this book seriously you can find yourself reading ridiculous things about drinking, dating, sex, penises,  shaving/waxing pubic hair, watching porn, etc. Things the target audience of this book would utterly enjoy and laugh about. The language is simple and straight to the point; the first person narration makes it easy to read. The characters are the classic characters of a sex comedy like American Pie with the slight difference that they are all British.

 

As for me, most of the time, I didn’t know if I was supposed to feel sorry for Ellie or laugh at the things she went through. There were some fun things to read, her reference to Chaka Khan after she finally lost her virginity was of course fun but there was some ridiculous things that sound too impossible for a 21-year-old of our times to go through, and there was stuff like a bathroom incident that was rather disgusting to read.

 

Even though Ellie’s adventures to losing her virginity were written as a comedy, the author ended up making Ellie look dumb, desperate and utterly irresponsible.

 

First of all, Ellie thinks that being a virgin is a tragic deplorable thing for a 21 year-old “woman”. What kind of sex ed did this girl get? For a senior in college, hasn’t she had plenty of time to go on the internet and do research on virginity to get her ideas straight?

 

Second, her reason for losing her virginity is stupid. This girl is obsessed on losing her “V plate” because she wants her medical records to say that she is sexually active and she needs to be able to get tested for STD’s, like she’s abnormal because she can’t request an STD test. She’d rather get and embrace STD’s than be a virgin:

Embrace any STDs you may or may not have, along with the regrets, the disastrous stories, the heartbreak, the pain and the regret. Because if it weren’t for all this stuff, life would be pretty dull. – From Virgin by Radhika Sanghani

What is the matter with this author and publishing company? Who in their right mind would let young readers think that it is a normal rite of passage to get STD’s because without them your life is dull? Any disease is an abnormal condition with serious life altering consequences. STD’s are not to be taken ever so lightly.

 

Third, Ellie’s concept of virginity and the loss of it. The whole point of her mission was to have her hymen penetrated by a male sexual organ for the first time, but before that happens she fingers herself ends up losing her virginity to herself because she thought it would be “so embarrassing” to bleed on your first time. Oh and let’s not forget that she had previously blogged about inserting a bullet and how bad it felt. Yes, I had to be that graphic but there was no other way of saying it (and it is described in detail in the book, in an almost step by step way). Anyway, how dumb is this character?

 

Fourth, the Vagina-Vulva Conundrum: I think we need to get something straight and stop using the word vagina to refer to the vulva. I know it’s the colloquial use of the word but this has gone far enough in society. Besides, if the author is writing a book in which sexuality is a main subject, the correct use of words is a must, especially when probably the majority of readers of this book are not only reading this because it’s fun but because they probably expect to get more knowledge on sex by reading this book. The author constantly refers to shaving or waxing vaginas. As far as I know, you don’t have any pubic hair on your vagina. How can you shave or wax your vagina? If waxing your vulva is painful, I can’t imagine the torture it would be to try to shave or wax your insides. Oh and don’t get me started on the reasons she had for waxing, it was not about her but about what she thought men want or think. *eyeroll*

 

I could keep going but I’ve already exceeded my 1000 word limit for my reviews so I’ll start to wrap it up.

 

The good part of this book is that it talks about “taboo-ish” topics that should be talked more often and more openly so we don’t end up with a world full of idiotic misinformed 21-year-olds like Ellie. The bad is that it is full of wrong ideas that the younger population will take the wrong way if they don’t have the proper guidance. So as far as recommending this book, I’d say it is for the college audience, who are old enough to see beyond the ridiculousness and will just read this book for the laughs. Of course, because of the sexual subject, there would be a lot of teenagers attracted to this book, young minds who should not read this book without proper parental guidance.

 

With this review I’m not saying do not read this book. On the contrary, I hope that those who actually finish reading this book don’t find Ellie’s character relatable. I hope readers learn important lessons out of Ellie’s ridiculously stupid mistakes. I hope that if there are virgins reading this book, they

 

1. get motivated to research more about sexuality,

2. understand that losing your virginity is a personal choice not an obligation or something that must be done for the sake of it, and

3. learn to make sexual decisions that will keep you above all HEALTHFUL, SAFE and happy forever.

 

 

Buy on Amazon US

Buy on Amazon UK

 

 

 

DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
I received aN Electronic copy of this book but was not financially compensated in any way nor obliged to review. The opinions expressed are my own and are based on my personal experience while reading it. This post contains affiliate links

 

 

Source: bloggeretterized.wordpress.com/2015/05/09/read-reviewed-48-virgin-by-radhika-sanghani
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photo 2014-07-15 18:21

Too all of my bookish friends out there in BookLikesLand! 

 

I have found myself with an Amazon gift balance that is substantial enough to buy 30 99¢ (plus tax) books, one for every day in the month of September. So I had a lightbulb appear over my head and, while it scared the crap out of me, I decided it was a pretty good idea. Ask for recs from my friends and I would purchase said books (assuming they pique my interest), read and mini review them in Sept. Yes, September because I will need time to read all those books.

 

So...I'm looking for book recs and here are the 'rules':

 

1. must be available on Amazon

2. must be 99¢

3. while I read just about everything, keep in mind that I have recently moved away from Contemporary and YA. Not to say I wouldn't read those genres if I'm interested, but lately I haven't been unless it's a cross-genre (for instance, YA Dystopian).

4. post your recs in the comments

 

Here's your chance to pimp an author you love or if you are an author then pimp your own book. I'm giving pimping free reign here! Free Love All Around! Pimp it! Pump it! Hump it! This is an STD-free Zone. Just remember: No means No. Play by the Rules or suffer My Punishment. I have a flogger and I'm not afraid to use it. *winks*

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