Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — Hormone Balance

Do You Know What Estrogen Dominance is?

Publicado por Ben White en

Estrogen dominance — an excess of oestrogen relative to progesterone — is one of the most common hormonal imbalances in women. From heavy periods and mood swings to breast tenderness and weight gain, the symptoms are wide-ranging. Discover the causes, what to test, and how to restore balance.

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Natural Progesterone Can Help Treat Breast Cancer- New Research Shows (Part 2)

Publicado por Ben White en

The latest research confirms what Dr. John Lee and Dr. David Zava argued decades ago: maintaining healthy progesterone levels in proper balance with oestrogen is one of the most powerful tools women have for preventing and recovering from breast cancer. This article outlines seven practical steps to restore hormone balance and reduce breast cancer risk.

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Natural Progesterone Can Help Treat Breast Cancer- New Research Shows (Part 1)

Publicado por Ben White en

A landmark study published in Nature confirmed what Dr. John Lee and Dr. David Zava argued over a decade ago: natural progesterone — unlike synthetic progestins — can slow or even shrink ER+/PR+ breast cancer tumours. This article explains the receptor science behind the findings and what it means for women’s hormone health.

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Guidance of Interpreting Hormone Testing Levels for Contraceptive Users

Publicado por Ben White en

Hormonal contraception suppresses ovarian function, which means saliva and blood spot hormone test results will appear artificially low — but this doesn’t mean hormone levels at the tissue level are low. This guide explains how to interpret hormone test results correctly when using the pill, patch, ring or IUD, and when to collect your sample for the most meaningful data.

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Prostate Cancer Prevention – Identifying Areas of Susceptibility

Publicado por Ben White en

Prostate cancer takes years to develop from a normal cell to a detectable tumour — which means there is a meaningful window for prevention. Three key risk factors are both testable and modifiable: BPA exposure, arsenic accumulation, and catechol oestrogen imbalance. This article explains how each one works and what men can do about it.

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