Name tweak could boost GLP-1 access for one in eight women suffering PMOS

Name tweak could boost GLP-1 access for one in eight women suffering PMOS


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Millions of women could soon have greater access to GLP-1 weight loss medications following the global effort to change the name of a hormonal condition that affects 1 in 8 women globally. 

The condition, formerly known as Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, or PCOS, recently underwent a name change following a years-long international effort, led by the Endocrine Society and women’s health researchers worldwide, to update how clinicians care for women struggling with the disease.

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The condition now called Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, or PMOS, is the leading cause of infertility in the United States. Women with PMOS symptoms can have trouble maintaining a healthy weight, mental health struggles, excessive hair growth or loss, and loss of reproductive functions, including missed periods and no ovulation.

But getting diagnosed with PMOS can be a challenge, in part due to the variety of symptoms. Research suggests that it can take, on average, one year and at

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