Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — hormone related wellness testing

How Hormones Lead to Obesity

Publié par Ben White le

Imbalances in estrogen, testosterone, progesterone and cortisol — brought on by ageing, diet and modern-day stress — are key drivers of the obesity epidemic. Learn how your hormones influence fat distribution and weight regulation, and how at-home hormone testing can help you take control.

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HORMONE BALANCE: The Key to Health

Publié par Ben White le

Most of us know when something feels off — fatigue, weight gain, mood swings, poor sleep. But fewer people realise that a hormonal imbalance is often at the root. Learn how the endocrine system works, what throws it out of balance, and how at-home hormone testing can help you find answers.

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Testing Methods and Safety

Publié par Ben White le

At-home hormone testing using saliva, dried blood spot and dried urine collection is not only more convenient than clinic-based blood draws — it is also safer, more accurate for certain hormones, and essential for capturing time-sensitive samples like waking cortisol or first-morning melatonin. This article explains how each collection method works, why dried samples carry minimal infection risk, and how ZRT Laboratory’s CLIA-certified processes ensure reliable results.

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What Exactly Are We Talking About Breast Cancer

Publié par Ben White le

Breast cancer is not one disease — it encompasses many distinct types with different attributes, degrees of invasiveness and treatment responses. Understanding the difference between invasive and non-invasive cancers, what hormone receptor status means, and which risk factors are modifiable can help women make more informed decisions about screening, lifestyle and hormone health. This article provides a clear, evidence-based overview.

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Breast Cancer: Prevention is the Cure

Publié par Ben White le

Breast cancer rates have risen from 1 in 30 to 1 in 8 women over the past 30 years — yet the focus remains on treatment rather than prevention. Drawing on 35 years of clinical experience and infrared thermography, this article makes the case that environmental toxins, xenoestrogens, hormone imbalance and lifestyle factors may account for 91–93% of breast cancer risk. Prevention, not just awareness, is the real cure.

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