Have you seen the tv commercial that focuses on a woman stuck in bumper-to-bumper highway traffic with
her partner and kids? She squirms and looks very uncomfortable, embarrassed and maybe even in pain. Suddenly a porta-potty floats gently down from the sky! The woman relaxes and smiles, and a picture comes on the screen showing a popular disposable pad/diaper product.
It’s true that many women suffer from some urinary incontinence or urgency. Sometimes it begins after pregnancy and birth, sometimes with the hormone changes in perimenopause. Some women just ‘leak’ when they laugh from a young age. But I hardly think a disposable pad for incontinence (billed as the traveller’s porta-potty) will make everything tickety-boo!
Yes, these products are helpful in some circumstances, but why, why, why, don’t we hear about products that can tone, build and strengthen the bladder? This is a preventive approach and the products that don’t heal the symptoms wouldn’t be necessary (or not for many years anyway)? Can’t our allopathic medical docs get on board with the idea of ‘complementary medicine’, like in Britain. When allopathic medicine combines with natural (i.e. herbs, homeopathics, mega-vitamins, trace minerals, etc.) we get the best of both worlds. If it’s good enough for the Queen of England, why isn’t it good enough for us?
MidLife Women – How humiliating is this?
Have you seen the tv commercial that focuses on a woman stuck in bumper-to-bumper highway traffic with
her partner and kids? She squirms and looks very uncomfortable, embarrassed and maybe even in pain. Suddenly a porta-potty floats gently down from the sky! The woman relaxes and smiles, and a picture comes on the screen showing a popular disposable pad/diaper product.
It’s true that many women suffer from some urinary incontinence or urgency. Sometimes it begins after pregnancy and birth, sometimes with the hormone changes in perimenopause. Some women just ‘leak’ when they laugh from a young age. But I hardly think a disposable pad for incontinence (billed as the traveller’s porta-potty) will make everything tickety-boo!
Yes, these products are helpful in some circumstances, but why, why, why, don’t we hear about products that can tone, build and strengthen the bladder? This is a preventive approach and the products that don’t heal the symptoms wouldn’t be necessary (or not for many years anyway)? Can’t our allopathic medical docs get on board with the idea of ‘complementary medicine’, like in Britain. When allopathic medicine combines with natural (i.e. herbs, homeopathics, mega-vitamins, trace minerals, etc.) we get the best of both worlds. If it’s good enough for the Queen of England, why isn’t it good enough for us?