SlideShow DES Art

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DEStiny

Artist Regina Holliday is a medical advocate muralist. She is using paint and brushes to promote health reform and patient’s rights.

Images copyright TwitPic – All rights reserved. DEStiny a jacket for @cascadia #TheWalkingGallery by @ReginaHolliday.

Female Reproductive Histopathology

Artist Penny Oliver says:

My name is Penny Oliver and I am committed to creating artwork that will inspire and reinvigorate you in your practice of medicine. By interpreting and translating anatomic, histologic and diagnostic images, I seek to create art that is both beautiful to the layperson and meaningful to the medical professional. Contact me to see how your work and passion can be transformed into a stunning piece of original art.” – Diagnosis ART, Custom Paintings for the Medical Professional

Images copyright Diagnosis Art – All rights reserved.

Surviving DES

Artist Patricia Ann Wilson says:

The watercolors and drawings, Surviving DES are a response to being a DES baby. My mother was given a drug, diethylstilbestrol, when she was pregnant with me. I have health issues as the result. The women who were given this drug between the 1940′s through the late 1970′s were actually being experimented on by the drug companies. These paintings and drawings, are my positive response to a negative situation. My art is my catharsis.”

Images copyright Patricia Ann Wilson Studio – All rights reserved.

More DES images

Watch our compilation of DES Pictures on Flickr via the DES Diethylstilbestrol’s photostream and photo sets.
Organize and share our compilation of DES Images on Pinterest via DES Daughter‘s online pinboard.

SlideShow DES Adverts

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DES Adverts Information

Back in the 1950′s and 1960′s, doctors were the target for most drug advertising campaigns including DES.

Drug companies supplied hundreds of doctors with samples to give to their female patients, thus creating a market for the drug (in the case of diethylstilbestrol even before it was approved by the FDA).

Somehow DES set the template of “How To” market a dangerous drug to women. In 1948, diethylstilbestrol was advertised as the “Wonder Drug” recommended for all pregnancies. The face of a cherubic infant grinned up from the pages of medical journals next to the caption: “Really? Yes, desPLEX to prevent abortion, miscarriage and premature labor…bigger and stronger babies“.

As early as 1953, research revealed that DES did not work – that DES actually brought about higher rates of premature birth and infant mortality – yet DES continued to be prescribed to pregnant women for decades mainly because pharmaceutical companies continued to heavily promote DES use to doctors and most doctors relied on the drug companies and their sales representatives for information.

Watch our compilation of DES Pictures on Flickr via the DES Diethylstilbestrol’s photostream and photo sets.
Organize and share our compilation of DES Images on Pinterest via DES Daughter‘s online pinboard.

SlideShow DES Research

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DES Research

The Flickr “DES Research” Photo Set features a selection of graphs, stats and the 2011 AFSSAPS DES survey report from France about the adverse effects of Diethylstilbestrol, the synthetic oestrogen prescribed to millions of pregnant women around the world decades ago in the mistaken belief that it would reduce the risk of complications during pregnancy.

Watch our compilation of DES Pictures on Flickr via the DES Diethylstilbestrol’s photostream and photo sets.
Organize and share our compilation of DES Images on Pinterest via DES Daughter‘s online pinboard.

SlideShow DES Media

Click to watch the Diaporama

DES Media

The Flickr “DES Media” Photo Set features a selection of press cuttings from around the world in English and French about the adverse effects of Diethylstilbestrol, the synthetic oestrogen prescribed to millions of pregnant women around the world decades ago in the mistaken belief that it would reduce the risk of complications during pregnancy.

Watch our compilation of DES Pictures on Flickr via the DES Diethylstilbestrol’s photostream and photo sets.
Organize and share our compilation of DES Images on Pinterest via DES Daughter‘s online pinboard.

SlideShow DES Books

Click to watch the Diaporama

DES Books

The Flickr “DES Books” Photo Set features front cover images of a selection of books and publications in English and French about the adverse effects of Diethylstilbestrol, the synthetic oestrogen prescribed to millions of pregnant women around the world decades ago in the mistaken belief that it would reduce the risk of complications during pregnancy.  Below is a short introduction presenting these books:

BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS IN ENGLISH

books about diethylstilbestrol image

Toxic Bodies: Hormones Disruptors and the Legacy of DES – Author Nancy Langston, published in 2011

In this gripping exploration, Nancy Langston shows how these chemicals have penetrated into every aspect of our bodies and ecosystems, yet the U.S. government has largely failed to regulate them and has skillfully manipulated scientific uncertainty to delay regulation. Personally affected by endocrine disruptors, Langston argues that the FDA needs to institute proper regulation of these commonly produced synthetic chemicals.

AFSSAPS DES Report – Author French Agency for the Safety of Health Products (AFSSAPS), published in 2011

As a result of a survey conducted in 2010, AFSSAPS decided to publish a DES update aimed at DES exposed individuals and health professionals. The publication emphasizes the gynecologists and obstetricians’ crucial role in recognizing DES exposure, informing their patients about its consequences and referring them to specialists for adequate care and monitoring. It also highlights the crucial role of DES patients in handing down the “record” of their exposure to the next generations. The AFSSAPS report is available to download in English and French.

Origins, How the Nine Months Before Birth Shape the Rest of Our Lives – Author Annie Murphy, first published in 2010

The book’s most chilling section involves the tragic results of thalidomide and diethylstilbestrol (DES), two drugs from the 1950s that were “given to pregnant women in the belief that the fetus would be unaffected.” Ms. Paul reveals six decades later: “It is evidence of the evolving state of our knowledge that the mechanisms by which these substances do their damage are not completely clear, even now.”

DES Voices, From Anger to Action – Author Pat Val Cody, published in 2008.

“Take a new estrogen promoted by the pharmaceutical companies. Add doctors ready to believe in another miracle drug. Take post-World War II women desperate to have a baby after miscarrying. Continue prescription for years. The result is the tragedy experienced by million of DES-exposed mothers, daughters, and son – and perhaps grandchildren. This is the story of what they did about the drug disaster that changed their lives.”

DES Stories, Faces and Voices of People Exposed to Diethylstilbestrol – Author Margaret Lee Braun, Theo Colborn and Nancy M.Stuart, first published in 2001

A tribute to the millions of lives upended by exposure to DES, diethylstilbestrol, synthetic estrogen, toxic chemical, and carcinogenic prescription drug. In photographic portraits and interviews, DES daughters, mothers, and sons tell, in their own voice, what it’s like to be DES-exposed. Today the DES story continues to unfold as research brings new findings to light. DES Stories rings with daring honesty—and points to broader concerns about the effects of endocrine-disrupting chemicals.

To Do No Harm: DES and the Dilemmas of Modern Medicine – Authors Dr. Apfel and Dr. Fisher, first published in 1985

In this important book, Drs. Apfel and Fisher demonstrate how explosive technological advances, physicians’ unconscious fantasies of heroism, and the urging of patients, among other factors, combined to produce the DES disaster-a massive tragedy that could occur again in any area of medicine.

DES Diethylstilbestrol – New Perspectives – Author David A. Edelman, first published in 1986

“An important contribution to the understanding of the uses of DES by pregnant women and the risks associated with this use. It is the only book on this subject that provides a scientifically objective overview and should be read by all who are involved in the debate over the effects of in utero DES exposure, including those men and women who were unfortunately exposed to the drug” American Medical Writers Association, July 1987.

BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS IN FRENCH

Distilbène: des Mots sur un Scandale – Auteurs Véronique Mahé, publié en 2011

On estime le nombre de victimes du DES à 360 000 en France. Préfacé par Marie Darrieussecq, marraine du Réseau D.E.S. France, ce livre donne la parole aux femmes et aux hommes – mères et pères, filles et fils, compagnons – qui vivent les douloureuses conséquences de ce scandale médical, pour faire entendre leur souffrance et leur colère

DES (Distilbène – Stilboestrol): Trois Générations Réalités Perspectives – Auteur Anne Levadou, publié en 2010

Book presented by the support group Réseau D.E.S. France presenting texts from speakers of the DES symposium organized in France in November 2010.

Moi, Stéphanie, fille Distilbène -  Auteur Stéphanie Chevallier, publié en 2010

Stéphanie Chevallier est présidente de l’association des “Filles DES”. Elle est aujourd’hui l’heureuse maman d’un petit garçon adopté au Vietnam et poursuit son combat au nom des victimes du Distilbène grâce à son important rayonnement médiatique (elle est apparue dans Libération, Le Monde, etc…). Ce livre est son histoire et son combat contre l’ignorance face au DES.

Le Distilbène Trente Ans Après – Auteur Bernard Blanc, publié en 2008

Cet ouvrage est le fruit de la collaboration de plusieurs experts reconnus pour leur compétence dans ce domaine. Il intéressera tous les gynécologues obstétriciens, les urologues, mais aussi les médecins de santé publique et les sages-femmes.

Saskia ou le deuil d’un bébé Distilbène – Auteur Anne-Marie Lof, publié en 2000

Ce livre est le récit poignant d’une mère qui, sans le savoir, attend un « bébé Distilbène », du nom de ce médicament que l’on a donné aux femmes contre les nausées. Or, les filles des mères « contaminées » ont une propension aux fausse-couches et à d’autres pathologies. A partir de ce drame, Anne-Françoise Lof écrit un récit poignant dont le point de départ est la « non-existence » de l’enfant qui n’étant pas né, ni déclaré civilement, est tout de même né, même s’il était mort, une vraie personne, avec un vrai deuil, un vrai enterrement, une vraie souffrance. Elle s’appelait Saskia.

Watch our compilation of DES Pictures on Flickr via the DES Diethylstilbestrol’s photostream and photo sets.
Organize and share our compilation of DES Images on Pinterest via DES Daughter‘s online pinboard.

SlideShow DES Drugs

Click to watch the Diaporama

DES Drugs Information

Di-Ethyl Stilbestrol was sold under many names including Distilbène®, Stilboestrol-Borne®, Benzestrol®, Chlorotrianisene®, Estrobene® and Estrosyn® to name just a few. Many companies manufactured and marketed this drug under more than 200 different brand names.

DES was not only sold generically under a multitude of brand names but also commonly administered in different shapes and forms: tablets, injections, vaginal suppositories and sometimes even as an ingredient in pregnancy vitamins.

In America alone there were 267 drug companies that made and distributed DES and other similar synthetic estrogens because it was un-patented and easily produced. Aggressive marketing pushed DES to also be used for more than 100 medical conditions.

No wonder most people who have been exposed to Diethylstilbestrol don’t even know about it!

Watch our compilation of DES Pictures on Flickr via the DES Diethylstilbestrol’s photostream and photo sets.
Organize and share our compilation of DES Images on Pinterest via DES Daughter‘s online pinboard.

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