Hips Dont Lie


Most of us have tried to squeeze into a pair of jeans that are too tight at some point in our lives, wiggling around as we convince ourselves the buttons will do up if we suck our tummies in far enough and that the seams won't chaff our legs if we walk in the right way.

A report by the Institute of Preventative Medicine in Copenhagen found that women with wider hips had an 86% less chance of having coronary heart disease and a 46% reduction in the risk of developing cardiovascular disease.
A study conduced by Harvard University found that women who live on low-fat diets in an attempt to lose weight are damaging their fertility while a study by the Royal Society Journal found that curvier women were more fertile than slimmer women, with those with a higher breast to under breast ratio or a low waist to hip ratio more likely to conceive.


Which could explain why men are actually are more attracted to curvier women

Smoking while pregnant, threatens fertility of Child


Latest research carried out in UK show that smoking is having a far more serious effect on sexual health than previously thought and is responsible for many thousands of cases of impotence, cervical cancer, miscarriages, and infertility. WOMEN who smoke while pregnant are threatening the fertility of boys

About 120 000 men in the United Kingdom aged 30 to 50 are impotent because of smoking, according to new calculations in the report. In addition, smoking is implicated in about 1200 cases of malignant cervical cancer and around 3000 to 5000 miscarriages every year.


Smoking can lead to a higher risk of miscarriage, premature birth and low birth weight, as well as more problems at and after birth

Female Condom


The female condom has never caught on in the United States. But in the third world, where it was introduced in the late 1990s, public health workers hoped it would overthrow the politics of the bedroom, empower women and stop the AIDS epidemic in its tracks. Only about 12 million female condoms are delivered each year in poor countries, compared with about 6 billion male condoms. Couples complained that the female version was awkward, unsightly, noisy and slippery. Many women tried it, but in the end, it was adopted mainly by prostitutes.

Now scientists are trying again. A new design — much the same at one end, different at the other — has been developed, and its makers hope it will succeed where its predecessor failed. The redesigned female condom is made of softer, thinner polyurethane to better transmit warmth. It is easier to insert; one end is bunched up as small as a tampon, an improvement on the old design, which resembled the stiff rubber ring of a diaphragm and had to be folded into a figure 8 for insertion. During sex, the new female condom also moves more like a vagina than the old design, according to couples in Seattle, Thailand, Mexico and South Africa who tested a series of prototypes, said Joanie Robertson, project manager for the condom at PATH. According to PATH, more than 90% of the couples were satisfied with the ease of use and comfort of the new condom, and 98% found the sensation of sex to be “OK to very satisfactory.” NYT NEWS SERVICE

Articles publish in this blog are collected from various journals and News agencies for your Hardness Matters

Lesbian

LESBIANS and bisexual women are less healthy than their heterosexual counterparts, according to a new study.

The study, by the WA Centre for Health Promotion Research, looked at identity, community connectedness, legal and illegal drug use, diet and nutrition, physical activity, cancer screening, mental health, harassment, safe sex practices and accessing health services
practices and accessing health services.
It found smoking rates in lesbians and bisexual women were almost double that of the broader female community. Alcohol use was also higher, with about 30 per cent in this group exceeding the national alcohol guidelines each week. Lesbians and bisexual women drank more alcohol than heterosexual women and drank it more often, associate researcher Jude Comfort said.
Internalised and externalised homophobia could also affect health.
“Internalised homophobia is whether they are happy with their own sexuality, or if they give themselves a hard time over it,” Ms Comfort said.
Ms Comfort said that in general, health systems had been slow to respond because they were seldom built with sexual minorities in mind.
“It could be argued that sexual orientation is a social determinant of health… yet there are few targeted programs which deal with general healthy lifestyle issues with this population.
“Obviously there are lesbians who are healthy, but taking the results as a whole, the figures are alarming.” Source: Australian News

Mine is bigger than yours


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Stress Can lead to Erectile Dysfunction In Men

Experts believe that psychological factors such as stress, anxiety, guilt, depression, low self-esteem, and fear of sexual failure cause up to 20% of cases.
Smoking, which affects blood flow, has also been linked to the condition.


There is enough data, though, to prove that stress can wreak havoc with your body, especially your reproductive system. “Stress in women disrupts the hormonal communication between the brain, the pituitary gland and the ovary, interfering with both the maturation of an egg and the ovulation process,’’ points out a paper from Harvard Medical School.

Information Published in this post is gathered from relevant article published at study groups and concern journals for your Hardness matters