Site icon Peter A. Hovis

What doctors forgot to tell women about COVID vaccines

SECRET CULTS AND THE AFTERLIFE VIEW ONLINE
MENSTRUAL CYCLES DISRUPTED BY COVID, VACCINES
Friday, October 28, 2022
In today’s newsletter, we find a surge in kids getting an often-deadly virus; discover links between COVID, vaccines, and menstrual cycles; catch a discovery in an ancient palace; find America’s most haunted places … and learn that the world’s best chocolate has just gotten better. Oh and Happy National Chocolate Day!
PHOTOGRAPH BY JAMES CAVALLINI, SCIENCE SOURCE
Women getting COVID were not told. Women getting COVID vaccines were not told.

Both the coronavirus and the protection against it really mess up menstrual cycles. For artist Raven La Fae, long after suffering through the virus and getting vaccines, her periods have not returned to normal—sometimes lasting up to 13 days a month.

“When COVID started, we were worried about people dying, so other things were overlooked,” says Yale obstetrician Hugh Taylor. The omission created fear, because women have been told menstrual changes could signal a hormonal imbalance, or even cancer. Why did menstrual cycles change? And why did this news take so long to get out?

Read the full story here. (Pictured above, an X-ray image of the female reproductive system.)

Please consider getting our full digital report and our magazine by subscribing here.

STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
PHOTOGRAPH BY ZAID AL-OBEIDI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Stunning ancient artwork found at site attacked by ISIS(The stone reliefs, above, were last seen some 2,600 years ago.)
His murder is still national news 67 years later. Why justice for Emmett Till remains elusive.
Did the world’s best chocolate just get better?
Sex with Satan in New Jersey? That’s one explanation for a legendary Garden State devil.
This abandoned railroad was London’s train for the dead
What would the world look like if all the ice melted?
Secret cults in ancient Greece changed how we think about the afterlife
James Cameron recalls ‘ghostwalking’ through the Titanic
16 spooky places around the world Related: These are the most haunted places in the U.S.
Video: Getting historic Salem right in ‘Hocus Pocus 2’
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
PHOTOGRAPH BY NIAID
The latest surge: It’s happening across America: Little kids, struggling to get oxygen, being carried into hospital emergency rooms. It’s not COVID. It’s a respiratory virus known as RSV (pictured above) that kills more than 100,000 kids a year under the age of five. Experts fear the seasonal virus has not yet reached its peak, but treatment is close to approval—and may be widely available for next year’s RSV attacks, Nat Geo reports.
THE ‘OTHER’ VIRUS
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPH BY PAUL ZIZKA, @PAULZIZKAPHOTO
A Strawberry Moon: In a few adrenaline-filled seconds, photographer Paul Zizka managed to freeze a perfect moment in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert: A camel and his handler, Mr. Unurbat, framed by the rising June supermoon—also known as the Strawberry Moon. Three lunar events must coincide to create a supermoon, which makes this photograph on our Nat Geo Adventure Instagram account even more rare.
WHAT MAKES A SUPERMOON?
LAST GLIMPSE
JOHN KOBAL FOUNDATION/GETTY IMAGES
Teen horror: It began as a contest among friends during a rain-drenched summer. Who could write the best scary story? The youngest member, Mary Shelley, just 18, won with a tale that would shape modern horror. Years later, she recalled the nightmarish vision from which Frankenstein was written. It had, she said, “a vividness far beyond the usual bounds of reverie.” (Above, a scene from the 1931 movie based on the novel.)
THE MONSTER
(Readers, a staggering number of pumpkins end up in landfills. How do you avoid pumpkin waste—compost them, eat the seeds, make a pie or bread? Let us know at sarah.gibbens@natgeo.com — and Happy Halloween!)

This newsletter has been curated and edited by David Beard, Sydney Combs, Jen Tse, and Heather Kim. Thanks for reading!

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS
We’d like to hear from you! Tell us what you think of our emails by sharing your feedback in this short survey.
TAKE THE SURVEY
SHOPDONATESUBSCRIBETRAVEL
Clicking on the Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and National Geographic Channel links will take you away from our National Geographic Partners site where different terms of use and privacy policy apply.

This email was sent to: peter.hovis@gmail.com. Please do not reply to this email as this address is not monitored.

This email contains an advertisement from:
National Geographic | 1145 17th Street, N.W. | Washington, D.C. 20036

Stop all types of future commercial email from National Geographic regarding its products, services, or experiences.

© 2022 National Geographic Partners, LLC, All rights reserved.

Exit mobile version
Skip to toolbar