Kathryn B. H. Clancy
researcher
- Kathryn Bridges Harley Clancy (born July 16, 1979) is an American biological anthropologist, specializing in reproductive health. She has also done research and policy advocacy concerning sexual harassment in science and academia. She is an associate professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.
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Quotes
edit... the study of ovarian and endometrial functioning creates the opportunity to test questions regarding a trade-off that characterizes human pregnancy: close maternal-fetal contact to improve resource transmission, yet higher vulnerabilities to pathologies related to energetics and inflammation such as gestational diabetes and choriodecidual inflammatory syndrome.
- "Inflammation, Reproduction, and the Goldilocks Principle by Kathry B. H. Clancy". Building Babies. Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects, vol. 37. Springer New York. 2012. pp. 3–26. doi: . ISBN 978-1-4614-4059-8; edited by Clancy, K.; Hinde, K.; Rutherford, J.
The Real Story of Menstruation (2023)
edit- ... as an adolescent ... from the world around me, I learned that must I hide all signs that I menstruated or face deep, crushing shame.
- "Preface". Period: The Real Story of Menstruation. Princeton University Press. 2023. p. vii. ISBN 978-0-691-19131-7.
- Menstruation is a wild process that should captivate and delight. It offers up so many lessons in terms of how we understand bodily autonomy, sexual selection, even tissue engineering. It is strange, then, that instead of being something so fundamental to science education as Mendel's peas or dinosaur bones or the planets of our solar system, it gets at best a brief mention in health class.
- ... A study in Taiwan found that, despite education programs on menstruation at school, the boys in the sample had a significantly worse attitude toward menstruation than the girls. ... An older study from the United States showed that men tended to think the majority of menstrual symptoms occurred during the menstrual phase, whereas women reported that they occurred during the premenstrual phase. Men also tended to think periods were more emotionally debilitating but less physically bothersome than women. ...
- "Introduction. Taking the Mystery Out of Menstruation". Period: The Real Story of Menstruation. pp. 2–3.
External links
editEncyclopedic article on Kathryn B. H. Clancy on Wikipedia