For decades, bacterial vaginosis has been treated as a women’s health issue—but new research suggests treating male partners ...
Health experts say an Australian study linking sexual activity to an infection that 1 in 3 U.S. women contract has provided a ...
Bacteria exposed to microplastics can become resistant to antibiotics, a new study has found. Researchers from the US ...
Bacterial vaginosis, which affects nearly 1 in 3 women, should be considered a sexually transmitted disease, according to a ...
Women experience fewer repeat infections with bacterial vaginosis when both they and their male sex partners receive ...
Increasing studies, however, have revealed that male partners may carry BV-associated bacteria on the penile skin and in the ...
Bacterial vaginosis affects nearly a third of women worldwide and can cause infertility, premature births and newborn deaths.
Bacterial vaginosis affects nearly 1 in 3 women of reproductive age. A study adds to evidence it is sexually transmitted, ...
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is not classified as a sexually transmitted infection, but the results of a new study could change ...
A common vaginal infection that affects nearly 1 in 3 women worldwide should be reclassified as a sexually transmitte ...
Bacteriophages, the most abundant life form on Earth, infect bacterial cells and influence the structure of the microbial ...
Microplastics-tiny shards of plastic debris-are all over the planet. They have made their way up food chains, accumulated in oceans, clustered in clouds and on mountains, and been found inside our ...