Women with multiple sclerosis taking b-cell suppressing therapies are at risk of developing persistent inflammatory vaginitis, according to a multidisciplinary team from NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia.
Do the hormone changes of menopause mean it’s time to kiss sex goodbye? As estrogen levels dip, women can experience symptoms such as hot flashes, anxiety, mood swings, and sleeplessness.
In the past five years or so, it’s become something of a burgeoning wellness trend for women of reproductive age to question, or even outright quit, hormonal birth control.
Preeclampsia is a condition that can affect pregnant women, causing high blood pressure that increases the risk of major cardiac events, seizures or even death.
Fulgent Genetics and the Precision Genomics Laboratory, in collaboration with the Department of Ob/Gyn announced a partnership to make on-site expanded carrier screening available.
The Department of Ob/Gyn at Columbia University Irving Medical Center convened a panel of experts to discuss the role of race in women’s health, including racial disparities in obstetric outcomes.
All women who use the Pill as their preferred form of birth control know how easy it is to forget to take that pesky pink pill at the same time every day.
This fall, the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Columbia University Irving Medical Center proudly welcomes five new full-time faculty members in four different divisions.
There are so many options when it comes to birth control — from condoms and oral contraceptives to vaginal rings, implants, and IUDs — that it can be hard to know which one to choose.
The Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Department of Medicine have announced a multi-disciplinary initiative aimed at screening, preventing, diagnosing, and treating hereditary cancer.