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💛 Visit Dr. Kaveh's longevity clinic for ketamine therapy, bioidentical hormone replacement therapy, and more: https://www.clarus-health.com 🫀 Exclusive access to Dr. Kaveh's live streams + more: / @medicalsecrets This video/speech/channel DOES NOT CONSTITUTE MEDICAL ADVICE. Patients with medical concerns should contact their physician. If your concern is an emergency, immediately call 911. This information is not a recommendation for ANY THERAPY. Some substances referenced in this content may be illegal, and this content is not a recommendation for, or endorsement of, their use in any way. According to the American Heart Association, nearly 50% of women don’t know the most common cause of death in women: heart disease. This includes heart attacks, strokes, heart failure, and other heart conditions. Unfortunately, the media may suggest otherwise. We are often bombarded by pink ribbons, especially in October (for breast cancer awareness) and around Mother’s Day, in May. Are these pink ribbons a scam? Breast cancer is very serious, no question about it. However, the intense advertising around pink ribbon products often makes breast cancer patients and survivors uncomfortable. They feel that their suffering is being exploited for corporate gain. This is in addition to a lack of transparency around where the fund raising actually goes. This has been described as pink washing by some that feel pink ribbons and marketing are scamming the public. While breast cancer awareness is incredibly important for prevention and treatment of breast cancer, it leaves the media with a gaping hole around heart disease, even though it kills more women than all cancers combined. Including breast cancer. This gap is incredibly important to address because heart attacks can have different symptoms in women than the classic symptoms we describe in men. This makes raising awareness about heart disease in women incredibly important. While the red dress campaign and the pink ribbon campaign both have undeniably good intentions, we can, and should, combine our efforts. There is incredible overlap in risk factors, and there is no need to have competing campaign efforts. Especially because the vast majority of breast cancer research funding comes from the federal government, and not these pink ribbon campaigns. More importantly, the symbols of these campaigns should not take advantage of women’s suffering, nor be symbols so closely associated with shopping and fashion. These stereotypes don’t further the critical public health messages their symbols are trying to spread.