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Osphena TV commercial
Osphena

Ospemifene, sold under the brand name Osphena, is a medication used to treat menopausal symptoms in women, especially vaginal dryness and pain during sexual intercourse. It is also used to prevent ost...

What the Osphena TV commercial is about.

Osphena TV commercial

Osphena is a prescription medication designed to relieve vaginal dryness and painful intercourse in postmenopausal women. Its TV spot is a 1-minute advertisement aimed at the female audience.

The ad starts with a quote from a satisfied customer, who says that Osphena has "given her back the intimacy she thought was lost forever." The ad script goes on to describe several symptoms such as vaginal dryness, difficulty with sexual intercourse and urinary incontinence, mentioning that more than 32 million women in the United States experience these problems.

The narrator then describes how Osphena works, by releasing hormones that mimic estrogen in the body. By doing so, Osphena helps restore the vaginal tissue, enabling women to have more comfortable, pleasurable sexual experiences.

The ad emphasizes that Osphena is FDA-approved and clinically proven to reduce the symptoms of vaginal dryness and painful intercourse. The narrator advises viewers to consult their doctor before trying Osphena and to let them know if they have had a history of breast cancer, blood clots or liver problems.

The ad ends with the tagline "Osphena - Helping Women Feel Like Themselves Again." Overall, the TV spot is a straightforward ad designed to generate awareness of a lesser-known medication and encourage women to seek out solutions to their post-menopausal symptoms.

Osphena TV commercial produced for Osphena was first shown on television on January 5, 2014.

Frequently Asked Questions about osphena tv spot

Company: Duchesnay Inc.

Each OSPHENA tablet contains 60 mg of ospemifene. Inactive ingredients include colloidal silicon dioxide, hypromellose, lactose monohydrate, magnesium stearate, mannitol, microcrystalline cellulose, polyethylene glycol, povidone, pregelatinized starch, sodium starch glycolate, titanium dioxide, and triacetin.

During menopause, your estrogen levels drop, which cause your vaginal walls to become dry and irritated. This can make sex painful and uncomfortable. Osphena (ospemifene) acts like estrogen in your vaginal tissue to relieve vaginal dryness and help make sex less painful.

Osphena (ospemifene) can raise your risk of uterine or endometrial cancer. The medication acts like estrogen in the lining of your uterus (endometrium). Estrogen helps maintain the thickness of your uterine lining. Too much estrogen can cause the lining to become too thick, which can lead to uterine cancer.

There doesn't seem to be a higher risk of endometrial cancer if you take Osphena for less than 1 year. But the risk goes up significantly the longer you take it. Studies have shown a higher risk of stroke within the first year of treatment and a higher risk of blood clots within the first 2 years of treatment.

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