Based on our record, WebMD should be more popular than Dadi. It has been mentiond 23 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
They gave me a brochure for dadikit.com. That site is no longer available, but links to ro.co . Ro.co has no kits available, and doesn't know when they will have kits available. Source: over 1 year ago
Back in late june, I had started attempting to procure HRT and also purchased the only form of sperm preservation I could afford (dadikit.com, which I don't mind name-dropping as this isn't exactly a glowing review). I'll get back to this. Source: over 2 years ago
I've opted to freeze my sperm before starting new medications and decided (perhaps correctly, perhaps incorrectly) to use a mail-in kit from dadikit.com. My results are as follows:. Source: almost 3 years ago
Look into dadi http://dadikit.com planned parenthood has a discount code as well, it ends up being $150 for the first year and $200 each year after I think! Source: over 3 years ago
Check webmd.com definition of gender affirming care for minors. It includes, among other things, top and bottom surgeries which puts those minors on a path of lifelong medication. Child marriages are wrong and even though that does not impact me, I think that all of 42 states in the USA should finally ban them. Adults can do whatever they want, but children are a different thing. Consent is important. And... Source: almost 1 year ago
Personally, I recommend avoid googling as much as you can. This disease is different than other cancers in regards to staging, and specific to each person, and the team treating you can interpret image studies, and the various tests, will be far more knowledgeable as to advise and treating you than healthline.com or webmd.com. There are some good resources out there, such as this and the cancer reddit. Source: about 1 year ago
I'm no kind of doctor. That said, in my experience, going off cold turkey can be a very bad idea -- I felt physically ill for weeks after quitting one med. Couple years later, I quit another, and came close to harming myself. Best idea is to discuss ramping down safely with your doc. If you're not comfortable doing that, at least check reputable web sites like drugs.com, webmd.com, mayoclinic.com. Google quitting... Source: about 1 year ago
Medscape.com is a really nice site with medical information (more physician-oriented compared to consumer-oriented sites such as webmd.com and the like; anyone can get a free membership). Here https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/171805-overview#a2, under Epidemiology, they note a four-fold increase in all-cause mortality among people with undiagnosed celiac disease. You might follow the links to the references... Source: about 1 year ago
3.8% of opioid users are abusers or addicts. (Source is both CDC.gov and webmd.com .). Source: over 1 year ago
Legacy Kit - At-home kit to check fertility and store your sperm.
Open mHealth - Open architecture is software with source code that is freely available to developers to promote...
Modern Fertility - At-home fertility tests – no clinic required
GooPatient - GooPatient is a free and simple software for personal health records.
Genomelink - A cutting edge learning tool for your DNA
Drugs.com - Prescription Drug Information, Interactions & Side Effects