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Infertility Has Many Faces And None Define Your Worth

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Infertility is a deeply personal yet globally significant health issue. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), it affects approximately 1 in 6 people of reproductive age worldwide. Clinically, infertility is defined as the inability to achieve pregnancy after 12 months or more of regular, unprotected sexual intercourse. For women over 35, the timeframe for assessment is often shortened to six months due to age-related fertility changes.


While infertility is often discussed in terms of biology, research in psychoneuroendocrinology (the scientific study of how the mind (psyche), nervous system (neuro) and endocrine system (hormones) interact and influence each other) shows that it is also an emotional and psychological journey. The stress of infertility can influence the body’s hormonal systems particularly the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis (the body’s hormone-regulating system that controls reproductive function by coordinating signals between the brain (hypothalamus and pituitary gland) and the…


Air Is Life—Pollution Is a Silent Killer

“Air pollution is the single biggest environmental health risk. Reducing air pollution could save millions of lives.” — World Health Organisation (WHO)
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Let’s be clear: air is not optional. It's a shared resource, not a private luxury. And yet, in far too many urban communities—especially where our people live, work, and raise children—air pollution has become an invisible enemy.


According to the World Health Organisation:

  • 36% of deaths from lung cancer are linked to air pollution


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