Webinar on Gynecology will be hosted on October 16, 2020. Will be emphasized on the theme “Exploring and Revealing New Advances to Improve Women’s Health”. Webinar will serve an excellent experience and opportunities to enhance one's career. Join us in this online conference to exchange various Innovative approaches in Gynecology and Obstetrics. Webinar on Gynecology aims to reveal advances in women’s healthcare and different management for women health disorders. This online conference will be an inestimable and important platform for motivating international and integrative exchange at the forefront of Gynecology. The webinar will assemble together Gynecologists, academicians and obstetricians from all over the world. Gynecology webinar gathering expects to unite driving scholastic researchers, inquire about researchers, understudies, representatives and exhibitors to trade and offer their encounters, look into comes about all parts of Gynecology streams.
Session 1: Advancements in Gynecology and Obstetrics
The recent advances in the field of Gynecology and Obstetrics can be explored and shared in this track. Advances in women health include Increased genetic testing, About zika and dengue virus, Preeclampsia related stroke deaths, Cannabis use and obstetrics outcome, The prevalence of obesity in teenage and adult women and The steep rise in the number of caesarean deliveries. Obstetricians and gynecologist shall realize and exhibit the appropriate knowledge, skills and attitudes to assess women by means of clinical history taking and physical examination as the examination of neck, chest, breast, abdominal, lower limb examination for both pregnant and non-pregnant women.
Session 2: Gynecological Oncology
Gynecological Oncology is a special field of oncology department that mainly comprises different cancers in the female reproductive system. The specialists who are trained can deliver their talk in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of these cancers. Gynecologic cancers affect a woman’s reproductive organs, including cervix, uterus, ovaries, fallopian tubes, vagina and vulva. A gynecologic oncologist is a physician first trained in obstetrics and gynecology who has an additional three to four years of training in gynecologic cancers including advanced surgery techniques and chemotherapy administration. These gynecologic oncology specialists use these skills to treat cancers of the female reproductive system.
Session 3: Urogynecology
Urogynecology is a subspecialty branch in medical science that deals with women who are unable to hold urine and stool and may be with damaged pelvic floor. The causes such as looseness of the genitalia and mass protruding from the vagina and preventive measures such as cosmetic correction of the genitals can be presented in this session. Female contemporary urogynecological practice encourages multidisciplinary teams working in the care of patients, with collaborative input from urogynecologists, urologists, colorectal surgeons, elderly care physicians, and physiotherapists.
Session 4: Infertility/Assisted Reproductive Technologies
Infertility is the inability to fertilize or impotence of a person to reproduce by natural means. It is not the natural state of a healthy adult, except notably among certain eusocial species. Artificial technique to achieve pregnancy in procedures such as fertility medication, in vitro fertilization and surrogacy is known as Assisted reproductive technology also referred as fertility treatment. It is reproductive technology mainly used for infertility treatments. It mainly belongs to the field of reproductive endocrinology and infertility, and may also include intracytoplasmic sperm injection and cryopreservation. Assisted reproductive technologies like Artificial insemination, Superovulation, In vitro Fertilization, Embryo Transfer have been introduced to overcome reproductive problems, to increase the offspring from selected females and to reduce the generation intervals in farm animals.
Session 5: Maternal Fetal Medicine
Maternal fetal medicine is a science of medicine that deals with maintenance of the health of the mother and fetus during and after child birth. The specialists in this field are those physicians who are experience in the work of obstetrics. Maternal and infant mortality rates due to barrier of pregnancy have decline by over 23% since 1990, from 377,000 deaths to 293,000 deaths. Most of the deaths occurred due to infection, maternal bleeding, and obstructed labour, and their incidence of mortality vary widely internationally.
Session 6: Reproductive Medicine
Reproductive Medicine is a branch a medicine that deals with the reproduction were the speakers will be presenting the preventive measures, diagnosis methods and the steps to manage reproductive problems with the motto to improve or maintaining reproductive health and allowing people to have their children at a time of their choosing. The doctors and the experts trained in reproductive endocrinology, infertility, sexual medicine and andrology can join us.
Session 7: Gynecological Surgery
Gynecological surgery specifies surgery on the female reproductive system. It is usually achieved by gynecologists and obstetricians. It includes operation for benign conditions, cancer, infertility, and incontinence. The speciality has gone through major changes over recent decades and now gynecologic surgery is performed and shared by many colleagues. Obstetrics and Gynecology generalists who perform a wide range of surgical interventions and sub-specialists whose expertise lies in specific areas although such professionals may also serve on a generalist obstetrical roster while “on call.”
Session 8: Women’s Health & Emergency Maternal Care
Most maternal deaths result from excessive bleeding, infections, hypertensive disorders, obstructed labor, or complications from unsafe abortions. Sadly, these emergencies are often difficult to predict. Efforts to reduce these deaths have included strengthening access to prenatal care, improving women’s nutrition, trying to identify high-risk pregnancies early, and training traditional birth attendants.
Session 9: Menopause
Menopause is the biological process through which a woman halt to be fertile or menstruate. It is a normal part of life and is not referred a disease or a condition and last for 50 years in women. Different treatments for menopause-related disorders and symptoms include advice for lifestyle, hormone replacement therapy, herbal treatments, other complementary therapeutics and antidepressants can be discussed in this track.
Session 10: Cosmetic Gynecology
Cosmetic Gynecology has become one of the fastest growing subspecialties of elective surgery for women and includes specialists in gynecology, urogynecology, urology, and plastic surgery. This area of special interest includes both cosmetic procedures to enhance the aesthetic appearance of the vulvo/vaginal region, as well as functional vaginal repairs to enhance or help restore sexual function following the changes that may occur following childbirth and/or aging.
Session 11: Gynecologic Anesthesia
Although important reductions in anesthesia-related maternal mortality have occurred in the past 5 decades, a greater risk (1.7 times) of maternal death is still witnessed with the use of general versus regional anesthesia. Anesthetic care for gynecologic surgery requires an understanding of gender-related differences in physiology, including sensitivity to pain, and pharmacodynamics, including responses to anesthetic drugs; such differences ultimately may affect patient outcomes and satisfaction. The different procedures and importance of anesthsia can be discussed and can present in our conference.
Session 12: Gynecological Imaging
Imaging in gynecology is much helpful in diagonosis which helps to identify various diseases in gynaecological oncology as well as in infertility. Modalities include sonography, radiography, computed tomographic (CT) scanning, magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, and less commonly, positron emission tomographic (PET) imaging. Of these, the evolution of sonography has now led to its use in gynecology equivalent to that in obstetrics. Moreover, advances in three-dimensional (3-D) imaging techniques have added such tremendous value to sonographic examination that it rivals the use of CT scanning and MR imaging for evaluation of many gynecologic conditions.