Jerilynn Prior

Jerilynn C. Prior an endocrinologist[1] and medical doctor specializing in menstrual cycles and the effects of hormones on women's health.[2][3] She has been called a leader in understanding and treating perimenopause and menopause.[4] She is an American who moved to Canada in 1976, and has taken citizenship there.

Biography

Jerilynn Prior grew up in small Indigenous fishing village in Alaska, USA. Ever since Prior was a young child she knew she was destined to work in health care. Prior was inspired to work in medicine after a public nurse visited her school to administer vaccinations[5].

Prior was granted a scholarship from the National Science Foundation for her to study English Literature at Linfield College, Oregon[6]. Prior then proceeded to study at the University of Oregon School of Medicine. However, continuing into her third year of studies, Prior transferred to Boston University School of Medicine. Prior graduated with honors, completing her master’s degree in medicine in 1969.[5]. Prior received her first training placement at Internal Medicine in Boston. Prior became a physician and worked in various states across the USA.[6]

Prior moved to Canada in 1976 because she believed in the universal healthcare system. Prior says that her research would have been very limited had she stayed in America. Prior became a Canadian citizen in 1984 and currently lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. Prior has been retired from clinical practice since 2009, after spending 40 years helping patients. Prior still partakes in consultations with health care practitioners in Canada and has been a professor at the University of British Columbia since 1994. Prior still works full time by doing research, writing and teaching.

Starting in 1967, Prior engaged in tax resistance to protest government spending on war, and she continued this protest after her move to Canada, refusing to pay a portion of her federal income tax equivalent to the war-related portion of the federal budget. When the government pursued the withheld money, Prior contested this in court. The Tax Court rejected her case, which she then appealed on freedom of conscience / freedom of religion grounds to the Federal Court of Appeal, which turned her down in 1988. The Supreme Court declined to hear her appeal in 1990, and a further appeal to the UN Human Rights Committee also met with no success.[7] She wrote a book about her struggle: I Feel the Winds of God Today.[8]

Scientific Work

Dr. Prior has proved to be a leader in the scientific community, especially regarding the use of progesterone; in fact, unlike many of her colleagues, Prior has been prescribing progesterone for postmenopausal women and perimenopausal women to treat hot flashes, night sweats, heavy flow, and sore breasts since 1995[9]. In a 2014 study conducted by Dr. Prior and colleagues, it was proven that progesterone is an effective treatment for menopausal hot flashes and night sweats. These findings debunk the beliefs that progesterone causes serious health concerns, including cardiovascular disease, and shows how the negative effects of progesterone have been “overblown”[9]. Within the international scientific community, Dr. Prior is especially known for her studies that prove progesterone causes women’s increased bone formation[6].

Dr. Prior has also conducted extensive research regarding combined hormonal contraceptive, more commonly known as ‘the pill’. Specifically, Dr. Prior has found evidence suggesting that using the pill early on can impact reproductive health[10]. In her review of the long-term effects for younger patients using the pill, Dr. Prior found that women who had been on the pill had lower ovarian reserve and also took longer to conceive a first child[10]. By focusing her research on adolescents, Dr. Prior is contributing to a field of research that has been mostly focused on older women.

Additionally, Dr. Prior has often and openly voiced hesitation for dispensing birth control for reasons “it was never designed for”[10]. According to Dr. Prior, most young women taking the pill are not given a prescription for birth control, but for an array of other reasons including cramping, acne, heavy periods, and irregular cycles. However, Dr. Prior argues that it takes years for a regular ovulation to take place, that “our bodies need time to find their natural cycle”[10] and that other prescriptions or medicine are better suited. For example, taking ibuprofen for alleviate the pain of cramps is a much better solution, given that it also lessens heavy flow. For adolescents, Dr. Prior recommends either a progestin-releasing IUD[11] or a “combination of diaphragm and spermicidal gel”, which are safer alternatives to the pill and more effective given that teens are not as diligent as older women when taking the pill[10].

Academic/Career Accomplishments

Prior is Professor of Endocrinology and Metabolism at the University of British Columbia, founder and scientific director of the Centre for Menstrual Cycle and Ovulation Research (CeMCOR),[12] director of the BC Center of the Canadian Multicenter Osteoporosis Study (CaMOS), and a past president of the Society for Menstrual Cycle Research.[2]

Prior is the author of three books, has over 200 publications, and holds 6 patents. She was awarded the University of British Columbia Faculty of Medicine Distinguished Medical Research Lecturer Award in 2002. Her research-based novel Estrogen's Storm Season was a finalist in the 2006 Independent Publishers Book Awards for Health.[2] She co-wrote the perimenopause chapter for the 40th anniversary edition of Our Bodies, Ourselves.[13]

Susan Love has called Prior a "champion for women's health", and she has been credited as one of the first researchers to propose that psychological and sociocultural factors must be considered in medical research on women's health.[14] Prior has been critical of the "medicalization of all things female" and has been recognized for pioneering research into women's ranges of normal experiences and physiology.[15]

Contributions to Feminism

When Prior first began her career in medicine, she was amongst one of the very few women in the field. Through all of Prior’s scientific contributions and her valued reputation, she has created an environment where people are “less quick to judge someone negatively just because she is a woman.”[16]. Prior has opened up new doors to research which will further benefit and educate women all around the world[16] Prior has achieved remarkable advancements as a feminist, specifically when it comes to the advancement of research on endocrinological health. Feminist approaches have seldomly included women reaching the menopausal stages in life. Prior has extended the common feminist notion and pushed for inclusion of aging and senior women in movements and research.

Prior has highlighted that women were originally seen as being biologically inferior.[16] Through Prior’s scientific work, she has argued that women should be deemed equal in value to men, without cultural prejudice.[16] Prior’s main premise through her research is “women should have safe, appropriate treatments and the means to understand their own bodies” the same way men do.[17] Prior has taken a stance in defence of discrimination when it comes to scientific research. Women have been left out of scientific studies as a result of physiological variabilities in terms of menstruation. Prior responded to the notion by saying that in science comparing men to women is like “comparing apples to oranges.”[18] In other words, men cannot adequately replace women in research because of physiological differences. As a result of scientific exclusion, women currently do not have accurate information about specific interventions. Prior says that women are more likely to have an adverse reaction to medicine, which makes it very significant for women to be heavily involved in research.[18] By advocating for the inclusion of women in scientific research, Prior is contributing to feminism.

Description of Books

  • Estrogen’s Storm Season: Stories of Perimenopause
    • Dr. Prior provides perimenopausal women and healthcare professionals with necessary tools to cope at this stage of life[19].
  • Transitions Through the Perimenopausal Years: Demystifying Your Journey
    • The female journey of perimenopause is discussed. Complex scientific information is simplified making it easier for women to understand[20].
  • The Estrogen Errors: Why Progesterone is Better for Women’s Health
    • The belief that estrogen therapy is the most optimal is challenged in this book. Scientific and personal experience is incorporated to debunk false beliefs[21].
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References

  1. Barton, Adriana (18 June 2012). "Progesterone may ease hot flushes, study finds". Globe and Mail. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
  2. "Jerilynn Prior, Associate Member". School of Population and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine. University of British Columbia. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  3. "Premenstrual mood symptoms questioned". CBC News. Oct 18, 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  4. Werschler, Laura (12 Feb 2013). "New study looks at treatment for night sweats". Troy Media. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  5. "Dr. Jerilynn Prior: Pioneering Research in Women's Health". Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research.
  6. "Jerilynn Prior Biography". The Centre for Menstrual Cycle and Ovulation Research.
  7. "Court rules objectors must pay "military" taxes". Ottawa Citizen. 13 January 1987.; Friends Journal July & October, 1987; "Jerilyn Prior and Her Supporters". The Mennonite: 541. 11 December 1990.
  8. Friends Journal June, 1993
  9. "Using Progesterone for Hot Flashes shown safe for Women's Cardiovascular Health". Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute.
  10. "Raising a Caution Flag on Teenagers and the Pill". Vancouver Health Research Institute.
  11. "The Menstrual Cycle and Health with Dr. Jerilynn Prior [Podcast]". Maryann Jacobs, Ms, RD.
  12. "Older hormone therapy as good as estrogen for hot flashes, trial suggests". CBC News. January 26, 2007. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  13. "DR. JERILYNN PRIOR RECOGNIZED IN RENOWNED BOOK: OUR BODIES, OURSELVES (2011 EDITION)". Vancouver Coastal Health Research. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  14. López‐Carrillo, Margarita (1 December 2007). "Aphorism of the Month". Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 61 (Supplement 2): ii25–ii25. doi:10.1136/jech.2007.059741. PMC 2465772.
  15. Woolley, Pieta (9 Jan 2008). "Doc offers new view of menopause pills". Georgia Straight. Archived from the original on 30 April 2013. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
  16. Kent, Heather (June 11, 2002). "Women, heal thyselves". cmaj. pp. 1583–1583.
  17. Woodley, Pieta. "Doc offers new view of menopause pills". Straight.
  18. Roussy, Kas. "Women's period seen as barrier to medical research". CBC.
  19. Prior, Jerilynn. "Estrogen's storm season: stories of perimenopause". CeMCOR.
  20. Prior, Jerilynn, Swan, Andrea, &, Zala, Lisaa. "Transitions Through the Perimenopausal Years".CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. Prior, Jerilynn, & Baxter, Susan. "The Estrogen Errors: Why Progesterone is better for Women's Health".CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)


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