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Ask a woman for the most embarrassing, frustrating, and uncomfortable health condition she’s ever dealt with down there, and bacterial vaginosis (BV) likely tops the list. While many women may have BV without any symptoms, the
telltale signs of a life-disrupting infection include surprise plops of gray, green, or white vaginal discharge, a fishy odor, itchy skin, a burning sensation when you pee, and painful sex all of which can make even the most empowered woman feel anxious and insecure.
Despite the shame and stigma that sometimes comes with BV, what’s happening isn’t your fault. Rather, it’s a reflection of the complex and ever-changing balance of bacteria inside the vagina.
December 11, 2020
A health care worker walks through a protective barrier in the Covid-19 ward at United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Tex., on December 4, 2020. (Mark Felix / AFP via Getty Images)
Defund. That one word has motivated thousands across the country to take to the streets this year to end police violence against Black Americans, and it has also become the punching bag for some Democratic politicians to explain their electoral misfortunes this cycle. But that word, defund, also explains why the United States surpassed 3,000 deaths from Covid-19 in a single day for the first time this week. That staggering number just one day’s toll from Covid-19 surpasses the number of Americans who died on 9/11. The federal government’s response to those attacks in 2001 was to spend $6 trillion dollars to address a so-called “national security emergency.” But when it comes to the national public health emergency brought on by Covid-19 that is the equivalent of 9/11 daily