The overturning of Roe v. Wade has severely restricted how doctors can access training in abortion care and it’s already having a devastating ripple effect on patients seeking all kinds of reproductive care. Two medical residents in abortion-restricted states fight for training and for the future health of their patients. Plus, the centuries-long battle over who gets access to abortion training in the first place.
Season 4, Episode 5: The Fourth Trimester
Season 4, Episode 4: Early Birds
Season 4, Episode 3: The Great Beyond
Season 4, Episode 2: Diverging
Season 4, Episode 1: Touch
Season 3, Episode 6: Reading the Signs of your Body
Season 3, Episode 5: Not Your Average
This week, the FDA will make a decision on whether or not to approve the first ever treatment for achondroplasia, the most common form of dwarfism. But not everyone is celebrating. This controversial treatment is forcing parents of children with achondroplasia to grapple with an age-old question: What’s best for my child?
Season 3, Episode 4: Carved from Secrets
When River was first told that something was wrong with their body, they didn’t think it was that big a deal. But the medical system and their parents disagreed. Outside pressure to make River “normal” would cause them tremendous pain and turmoil — until they discovered there’s more than one right way to be a human.
Season 3, Episode 3: LA's Toxic Secret
For decades, a toxic gooey substance oozed from a schoolyard in Cudahy, California. It took years of community activism to get the school cleaned up in 2000. Fighting for safe land is a common struggle for many parts of L.A. County, where schools are built on or near industrialized land. So who is responsible for ensuring that schools are free from toxins? And with a controversial plan to build a new school in Cudahy, how is it all playing out today?
Season 3, Episode 2: Do Less Harm
Lill lives in Appalachian West Virginia — it’s coal country, and it’s also the overdose capital of the United States. An increasingly dangerous drug supply and a lack of safe supplies like clean syringes leave people who use drugs vulnerable to disease and death. Lill is trying to fill that gap, providing safe supplies and care all over West Virginia — even as the government tries to stop them.
Season 3, Episode 1: Something Extra
Season 2, Episode 7: Changing Shape
Season 2, Episode 6: Not This Again
Season 2, Episode 5: Invisible Impact
Season 2, Episode 4: Postpartum in a Pandemic
Season 2, Episode 3: The Cost of Silky Soft
Johnson & Johnson knew its baby powder contained asbestos but kept selling it and specifically marketed the product to Black women. Krystal is one of thousands of women who claimed J&J’s baby powder caused their ovarian cancer. How did normal body odors become racialized? Who determines if our products are safe?
Season 2, Episode 2: Not Tested on Humans
Season 2, Episode 1: Uncontrollable Orgasms
Episode 6: Unraveling
In a lot of ways, menopause is like puberty. Your hormones are changing and setting off a whole host of bodily changes. It’s something that happens to half the population, but still, it’s full of mysteries. In this episode we hear from Lisa Renee Hartman and another woman who you’ve heard from once before.