Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Invoked during childbirth and against diseases of the eye - Hemma of Gurk; Childbirth, sickness - Juliana of Nicomedia; Women in difficult labor - John of Bridlington; Difficult pregnancy and safe child birth - Peter and Fevronia of Murom; Invoked by pregnant women for safe delivery of children - Silvia [5] Childhood illnesses - Deicolus
Bona Dea, goddess of fertility, healing, virginity, and women; Cardea, goddess of health, thresholds and door hinges and handles; Carna, goddess who presided over the heart and other organs; Endovelicus, god of public health and safety; Febris, goddess who embodied and protected people from fever and malaria
The Heart Truth is a campaign meant to raise awareness of the risk of heart disease in women. [1] The campaign is sponsored in the United States by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute , an organization of the United States Department of Health and Human Services ; [ 1 ] a similar campaign is promoted in Canada by the Heart and Stroke ...
Cardiologists share the warning signs of heart attack that every woman should know, plus potential risk factors. Knowing These Surprising (and Subtle) Signs of a Heart Attack in Women May Save ...
Although experts have known for years that women have different symptoms of heart disease than men do, the message still isn't getting through to women.
The visions of most female mystics during the Middle Ages came in the form of mental images. [8] Medieval women mystics were considered prophets by their communities. [ 9 ] During the Middle Ages, medieval interpretations of Biblical passages such as Corinthians 14:34 [ 10 ] resulted in women being excluded from the Church's hierarchy and ...
They were treated as women by the community and were considered as comparable to biological women aside from their incapability to give birth to children. Their social status and recognition also granted them access to professions related to the spiritual realm, such as shamans and religious functionaries.
Traditional healers deal with everyday forms of illness or injury and can include herbalists, surgeons, massage specialists, midwives, or medicine men and women. What sets traditional Alaska Native healers apart from western doctors is both their traditional methods as well as the source of their healing abilities.