The effects of DES on females are known and documented. The fact remains that about half of the babies born of mothers who took DES during pregnancy were male.
Find more about DES sons on
Read DES, and the (other) half of it by KMFDallas.
More DES DiEthylStilbestrol Resources
- DES studies on cancers and screening.
- DES studies on epigenetics and transgenerational effects.
- DES studies on fertility and pregnancy.
- DES studies on gender identity and psychological health.
- DES studies on in-utero exposure to DES and side-effects.
- DES studies on the genital tract.
- Papers on DES lawsuits.
- DES videos and posts tagged DES, the DES-exposed, DES victims.
I wonder if this is the only development that went wrong. I feel there are so many unknowns.
Michelle
it continued on the next generations Michelle…
A very powerful and expressive post and the last 3 words drove home how heartbreaking and what torture the generational effects of DES are…
Mary
thank you Mary
Thanks for sharing such a well-written highly informative article. I hardly know what to say in comment, except that I greatly admire the work you are doing in raising awareness about this problem, and grateful that you are including men in this awareness campaign.
Mark
many thanks Mark