Featured in Finally at 40 Magazine

I was recently featured in the most recent edition of Finally at 40 Magazine.

To read her story click on the images from left to right.

Special thanks to the crew at Finally at 40 for allowing me to publish the story on my website.

To subscribe to Finally at 40, visit their website now.  It’s a great magazine and very inspirational.

Featured in Finally at 40 Magazine

I was thrilled to be featured in the Finally at 40 Magazine, Autumn edition 2010.

Special thanks to Hayley Solich, Feature Writer for Finally at 40, who wrote the article and took the photos of me.  I really appreciate your ongoing support, Hayley.

You can purchase your copy of Finally at 40 Magazine at a newsagent near you.

Here is an excerpt from the article…

…When most women are stepping into the prime of their life – embracing the newfound sense of themselves and the opportunities that maturity and life experience brings – Kath Mazzella was stepping into dark days. She was an ordinary thirty-nine year old woman – working, with teenage children, and a partner – whose world was literally turned upside down.

Discovering a lump on her vulva, Kath did what most women would do and went to see a doctor. Over a period of eighteen months, two GP’s and two gynaecologists assured her that it was common to have lumps “down there” and not to worry about it. However, because she had a family history of cancer – her father had died of lung cancer in 1988, and both her mother and sister have both had breast cancer – she insisted the lump be removed and tested.

“It was my mum that got me thinking,” Kath reflects. “I told her about the lump and she said that lumps on your body anywhere are not normal. So I decided to listen to my mum and to my own intuition and I’m glad I did because it saved my life…”


Prof Rosemary Coates 1st Intern. Pres Sexual Health

Power to Prof. Coates

Meeting with an Honourable Women Prof. Rosemary Coates

Order of Australia Medal – The Photos



Hear what Sharon from the Indigenous Community has to say…

From: Sharon
Sent: Wednesday, 10 February 2010 8:19 AM
To: mazzella@bigpond.com
Subject: RE: World Discussion GYN Health – Call for support – Intern. GYN Aware Day & UK Intern. Gyn Day

Thankyou so much sista for making contact with me today, it was lovely to catch up. You have my 100% support with your push to raise awareness and hopefully impact on prevention of women’s business when it comes to vulva and other cancers. I will certainly be pushing to have our day on 10/9 this year, I’m fairly confident that the management here will support the day with no problems. As I said to you on the phone Kath, you have saved the lives of countless woman because of your dedication to this very important womens health issue called Vulva Cancer. You have given me the knowledge and in turn I have shared this knowledge with women from my community who also have been saved as a result of being empowered to look after their own bodies. What amazes me in society is that its acceptable to people that porn is viewed, looked at or read about in the home or wherever but we shouldn’t talk about Vulva Cancer?????????? Pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeee I say get over it to everyone out there, to the men out there they can do their bit by encouraging their women to take a more active role in looking after their bodies, its in their best interest if you know what I mean. So much work to be done and let me assure you I will always stand beside you on this very important issue Kath. Thankyou for helping me help my community.

Lots of love and warm wishes for continued good health and happiness
Sharon

Princesses in Petticoats & Pearls event 6 March 2010

Kath Mazzella will be speaking at the Princesses in Petticoats & Pearls event organised by Women Can International Inc at the Lily of the Valley Cafe, 78 John Street, Henley Brook.

All women are invited to join Kath at the event.

Watch the video and learn more about this enchanting venue and tempting event.

Kath to be featured in Finally at 40 Magazine

Kath will be featured in the Autumm Edition (due out in March 2010) of the popular national Women’s Magazine, Finally at 40.

An excerpt from the article…

“…Imagine if you will, doctors, nurses, women, men, politicians, public servants or other community representatives, all sitting across the table, enjoying a cuppa, sharing a scone and their experiences and knowledge. Asking questions, allaying fears, uncovering misconceptions, dispelling stigmas and normalising sexual health. This is the progress I would like to see in my lifetime and I can gratefully say, I am seeing before my eyes. It’s been fifteen years of hard work but I’m so excited to see the shift finally happening.”

Grab a copy when it comes out and read about how Kath discovered cancer on her Vulva and what happened afterwards.

Kath’s address at the Vulval Awareness Day, Perth, 2009

Hosted by Em from 92.9FM radio, the Vulva Awareness Day was an event focused on promoting GYN and Sexual Health Awareness. Kath was guest speaker, alongside of a range of medical professionals. This is her speech.

More Women Can Avoid Hysterectomy for Common Problem

Federally-Funded Study Shows More Women Can Avoid Hysterectomy for Common Problem CYPRESS, Calif., Dec. 27 /PRNewswire/ — A minimally invasive procedure called endometrial ablation is as effective as hysterectomy in solving a common female complaint called “dysfunctional uterine bleeding” or DUB, according to a new federally-funded study published in the Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. DUB (dysfunctional uterine bleeding) can be described as abnormal bleeding which cannot be attributed to abnormalities of the female reproductive system, pharmacological interaction, intrauterine contraception, or bleeding disorders. It is also referred to menometrorrhagia. The condition affects up to a third of all women at some point during their reproductive years, usually women over age 30. It is characterized by extremely heavy, erratic menstrual bleeding and is often accompanied by fatigue, pelvic pain and decreased quality of life. The excessive blood loss in DUB can provoke iron deficiency anemia. “This is a very important study, proving that a minimally invasive procedure — endometrial ablation — can solve the problem of excessive bleeding as well as hysterectomy,” commented Franklin D. Loffer, M.D., Executive Vice President/Medical Director of AAGL, the professional organization dedicated to the advancement of minimally-invasive gynecologic surgery. “Women should always be offered the least invasive, effective approach to solving her medical problems.” While hysterectomy (the removal of the uterus and in some cases the ovaries and cervix) has a long history of use to cure DUB, newer, less invasive procedures have become available in recent years. These have stirred controversy over whether hysterectomy is overused, particularly for conditions such as DUB for which more conservative approaches may be just as effective and cause fewer complications. The new study, bearing the acronym of StopDUB for “Surgical Treatments Outcomes Project for Dysfunctional Uterine Bleeding,” was a multi-center, randomized, controlled trial in the U.S. and Canada involving 237 women at 25 treatment centers. The primary complaint causing women to seek surgery was excessive bleeding that had not been mitigated by medical therapy. These women were randomly assigned to receive either hysterectomy or endometrial ablation, a minimally invasive technique that removes only the lining of the uterus (the lining cells are responsible for the bleeding), not the entire organ. The primary measure of success in the study was women’s satisfaction with their treatment, rather than just a clinical endpoint. After three years of follow-up, the vast majority of patients in both groups (93-95%) reported that their problem was solved. The secondary endpoints of pain and fatigue were also similar between the hysterectomy group and the endometrial ablation group. “Using women’s satisfaction as the study goal, rather than clinical endpoints alone, was very astute from our perspective, because the most important outcome is the woman’s opinion, not the doctor’s,” said Dr. Loffer. “Our view at AAGL is always patient-focused: how much pain will there be, how much trauma, how much time lost, what impact on the quality of life? These are the measures that count.” Advantages of the less invasive procedure include shorter hospital stays (hours instead of days), less blood loss, fewer complications and quicker recovery. In many cases endometrial ablation causes menstrual periods to become much lighter and more regular, rather than eliminating them altogether. Many women consider this to be a satisfactory outcome and would prefer to have normal periods rather than lose their uterus. “Both endometrial ablation and hysterectomy are effective treatments in women with dysfunctional uterine bleeding. However, hysterectomy was associated with about four times more adverse events and six times as many postoperative infections,” said Malcolm Munro, MD, an investigator in the StopDUB Research Group at the David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles. Dr. Munro is also an advisor to the AAGL. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommends that treatment for menorrhagia begin with the least invasive therapy. But, for some women, endometrial ablation may not solve their problem. “In this study about two thirds of women were able to avoid hysterectomy by having an endometrial ablation procedure while about a third of the patients who had received endometrial ablation ended up having a hysterectomy several years later. This rate is comparable to that seen in other studies,” said Munro. About 600,000 hysterectomies are performed annually in the U.S., making it the second most common major surgery performed on women of reproductive age. There is controversy about how many of these hysterectomies are really necessary. Clearly, 120,000 hysterectomies performed each year for DUB (without uterine pathology) are amenable to endometrial ablation. Moreover, many patients with uterine fibroids and abnormal bleeding can be treated via endometrial ablation. Fibroids account for 40% of hysterectomies each year. While some doctors may look for anemia as a diagnostic indicator for DUB, in the StopDUB study women’s perception of their problem was the main criterion, supported by clinical measures of excess duration, amount, or unpredictability of flow. “We felt that women should not have to be anemic in order to seek help and have their problem taken seriously,” said Munro. “Based on our results, it is reasonable to recommend that women should select the type of surgery they want for DUB, based on their preferences and situations,” concluded Munro. About AAGL The AAGL is the first and largest organization in the world dedicated to gynecologic endoscopic surgery. Founded in 1971, AAGL works to advance the safest and most efficacious diagnostic and therapeutic techniques that afford less invasive treatments for gynecologic conditions through the integration of clinical practice, research, innovation, and dialogue. For the past 36 years, the organization has educated the world’s finest surgeons while improving the lives of women everywhere. This global commitment to women’s health care is embodied in their continuing medical education of physicians and professionals to further promote the well-documented high standards of minimally invasive gynecologic surgery. For more information visit http://www.aagl.org. http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/12-27-2007/0004728173&EDATE=

Victory Under Loan Voice Action (VULVA)