Interventions at level 3 of low sex drive treatment involve the highest risk and often the highest costs. The most common drug therapy for treating hormonal imbalance in the US is hormone replacement therapy (HRT). There's no doubt that this is the quickest and strongest way to combat hormonal imbalance; but, unfortunately, it entails serious side effects and increases the risk of different cancer types among women, as the following study has proven.
In 1991 the National Institute of Health (NIH) launched the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), the largest clinical trial ever undertaken in the United States. The WHI was designed to provide answers concerning possible benefits and risks associated with use of hormone replacement therapy (HRT). This study was canceled in July 2002, after it was proven that synthetic hormones increase risks of ovarian and breast cancer as well as heart disease, blood clots and strokes. The findings were published in JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association. |
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If you still want to consider this approach, take a visit to your physician, and be more informed about what this treatment option involves.
These three levels of approaches are not mutually exclusive. You can use different approaches at different times or combine several at the same time. Nowadays more and more women think dealing with low sex drive is best accomplished via a combination of healthy lifestyle and alternative treatments.
A safe way for treating low sex drive:
Non-estrogenic herbs for treating low sex drive, as seen in the second approach, are considered to be the most effective solution. Low costs and the non existence of side effects are only some of the reasons why to prefer this treatment option.
Macafem, for example, is an excellent non-estrogenic herb. Its simple, rather than putting hormones from outside into your body artificially, Macafem stimulate your hormone glands to produce the necessary hormones naturally. This is what makes Macafem so unique. Click here to read all about Macafem. |
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