3rd Endo Black Advocate and Allies Conference and raise awareness during Endometriosis Awareness Month at Harborside Hotel in Oxon Hill, MD.
Tickets still appear to be available at https://events.eventnoire.com/e/endo-black-conference.
26
Mar
3rd Endo Black Advocate and Allies Conference and raise awareness during Endometriosis Awareness Month at Harborside Hotel in Oxon Hill, MD.
Tickets still appear to be available at https://events.eventnoire.com/e/endo-black-conference.
25
Mar
March 25, 2023
Virtual Worldwide Endo March
Part 1 Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?ref=watch_permalink&v=705811864620935
Part 1 YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBUPO1qp9UE
Part 2 Facebook Live: https://www.facebook.com/worldwideendomarch/videos/244328754715995
Part 2 YouTube Live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kPYqbXp4gdc
25
Mar
March 24-26, 2023
The Endometriosis Summit
In person and virtual:
https://web.cvent.com/event/3ebcdc4d-626d-4025-8146-569d6dcdcd1e/summary
19
Mar
Corinne Foxx details experience with endometriosis, producing film about the condition
As an executive producer of “Below the Belt” and ambassador to the Endometriosis Foundation of America, Corinne Foxx is hoping others will feel less alone.
March 16, 2023, 1:42 PM PDT / Source: TODAY
By Meghan Holohan
One day, a roommate found Corinne Foxx balled up on the bathroom floor in the grips of menstrual pain. Since she started her period, Foxx experienced intense pain, nausea, chronic fatigue and bladder discomfort during menstruation. She thought that’s simply what a period was like.
“I had a roommate tell me, ‘Corinne, this is not normal,’” Foxx, producer, actor and daughter of Jamie Foxx, tells TODAY.com. “That was the moment for me where it just changed the trajectory of my life. And then I went on this journey to start figuring out, ‘Well, if it’s not normal, then what is it?’”
Foxx, 29, later learned she had stage 4 endometriosis, which occurs when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows in other places in the body and forms lesions. The condition impacts 11% of women between the ages of 14 to 44, according to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office on Women’s Health. On average, it takes seven to 10 years to be diagnosed with endometriosis.
Foxx also experienced a delay in diagnosis. Doctors dismissed her concerns, and she visited “five or six doctors” who told her she had everything hormone imbalances to possible bladder cancer, she recalls.
“It was really a terrifying process and a frustrating process,” she says. “There’s a lot of medical gaslighting that goes into this journey. I think women of color, especially, are often silenced or not believed when they come in with symptoms.”
Still, she kept searching for help.
“You just have to keep showing up for yourself. I learned that no one’s going to fight for my health more than me,” she says. “That really empowered me in the long run despite being discouraged.”
Eventually, Foxx visited a doctor who knew what was causing her symptoms.
“Finally, a doctor had said, ‘I think this is endometriosis,” she says. “I didn’t even really know what that meant.”
The doctor told her she could schedule surgery without giving her any information about what the surgery was or what having endometriosis meant. At first, receiving that diagnosis didn’t feel validating because she felt unsure what it was and what surgery she needed.
“I look back at that period of my life, and as difficult as it was, it was super empowering because I had to trust myself. I had to listen to my gut, literally,” she says. “ I came out stronger.”
Foxx began reading medical journals, following online groups and listening to podcasts to learn more about endometriosis.
“I did my own research and learned about the disease and learned about the right surgery that I needed,” Foxx says. “Then I got a specialist, Dr. Iris Orbuch, who ended up doing my surgery and ended up elevating so much of the disease for me.”
In October 2018, she underwent excision surgery with Orbuch. Considered the gold standard treatment for endometriosis, per the Endometriosis Foundation of America, the minimally invasive surgery involves specially-trained surgeons who remove the endometriosis lesions.
The surgery reduced Foxx’s pain and symptoms.
“I’m feeling so much better. The surgery I got changed my life,” she says. “I’m in semi-pain free — endo has a mind of its own sometimes and somedays aren’t the best — but for the most part, I’ve done so much better and it’s such a privilege.”
Through her doctor, Foxx learned about director Shannon Cohn’s hope to make a documentary, Below the Belt. Foxx became an executive producer of the film, which was released in 2022.
“I (told Shannin), ‘I’ll do everything I can to help illuminate your new film and get it in front of as many people as possible,’” Foxx recalls.
The film focuses on four women with endometriosis and the struggles they encounter.
“We have women at different places in their lives,” Foxx says. “We have a young woman who is still in high school. We have a woman who wants to have a baby.”
Endometriosis commonly causes infertility. According to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, anywhere from 30 to 50% of women with it experience infertility.
Cohn and other producers, including actor Rosario Dawson, recently screened the film for members of the U.S. Senate.
“What’s really special about this is that we are getting bipartisan support,” Foxx says. “The goal of the film is education and awareness and also advocacy to get more research dollars for endometriosis so that we can find more affordable treatments, more affordable and effective imaging so you don’t have to do a surgery to find out if you have endometriosis.”
MRIs and ultrasounds do not always detect endometriosis, so definitive diagnosis is provided with surgery, according to the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Some insurances do not cover excision surgery, making it unattainable for many.
“I am advocating for making these surgeries more accessible. My surgery, I had to pay out of pocket,” she says. “Not a lot of people can afford that. Where I see there’s a lot more room for change is just making the treatment available and accessible to all people.”
Foxx also feels passionate about educating others about endometriosis and will serve as an ambassador to the Endometriosis Foundation of America’s ENPOWR program, which will teach school-age children about the condition.
“If I had this information when I was learning about periods in my fifth grade health class, it would have made a world of difference for me,” she says.
Foxx tries talking to her sisters, who are 14 and 15, about it, but they often don’t pay attention to their “so not cool” older sister, she says.
After her diagnosis, Foxx learned she had an aunt and grandmother with endometriosis.
“It’s something that was uncomfortable to talk about. Of course, it’s an intimate area of your body,” she says. “I want to (shed) light on reaching out within your own family and seeing if there is family history.”
The Endometriosis Foundation of America is honoring Foxx’s work advocating for people with endometriosis as an ambassador with a Blossom Award during its Blossom Ball on March 20. She says listening to Lena Dunham and Halsey’s speeches when they received the Blossom Award helped her when she was trying to understand what an endometriosis diagnosis meant.
“I felt so seen and I felt like, ‘Wow these incredibly successful women also have endometriosis, and maybe this isn’t the death sentence I’m thinking it is,’” she says. “For me to be standing on that same stage and sharing my story, it’s very emotional, and I just hope to be able to inspire women the same way that I feel inspired.”
Foxx also serves as an ambassador for the National Alliance on Mental Illnesses, and she’s able to combine her two passions into one by hosting an Instagram live on March 28 about endometriosis and mental health.
“There’s a mental component to it that we should be having a conversation about,” she says. “We’ve been working on a form of a campaign to illuminate the relationship between chronic pain and mental health. … There is trauma, there is depression, there is anxiety. So much goes hand-in-hand with living with chronic pain.”
And Foxx hopes her experience helps people of color with endometriosis feel less alone.
“I am aware that me sharing my story is going to impact people who look like me and I hope that people see themselves in me and see a woman of color talking about her experience,” she says. “My hopes for being an ambassador with Endo Found is to make someone else’s journey a little bit easier.”
Bindi Irwin is shining a light on this painful, underdiagnosed condition
March 8, 20235:24 PM ET
Manuela López Restrepo
One in 10 women or people with uteruses experience endometriosis during their reproductive years. To combat the ongoing stigma around it, Bindi Irwin has documented her surgery and called for people to “keep searching for answers.”
Who is she? Depending on how old you are, you might remember Bindi Irwin as the daughter of America’s favorite late Aussie TV show host, Steve Irwin (AKA the crocodile hunter).
What’s the big deal? On Tuesday, Irwin shared social media posts detailing her decade-long battle with endometriosis, writing: “For 10yrs I’ve struggled with insurmountable fatigue, pain & nausea. Trying to remain a positive person & hide the pain has been a very long road.”
What are people saying?
Bindi Irwin on her struggle with the condition:
Things may look fine on the outside looking in through the window of someone’s life; however, that is not always the case. Please be gentle & pause before asking me (or any woman) when we’ll be having more children. After all that my body has gone through, I feel tremendously grateful that we have our gorgeous daughter. She feels like our family’s miracle.
I’m aware of millions of women struggling with a similar story. There’s stigma around this awful disease. I’m sharing my story for anyone who reads this & is quietly dealing with pain & no answers. Let this be your validation that your pain is real & you deserve help. Keep searching for answers.
Linda Griffith about why so many overlook endometriosis:
Some women just don’t understand that other women could have these terrible, terrible things happening, because they themselves don’t experience those symptoms. “Period privilege,” as I’m calling it, could be active or passive. Passive is just they don’t think about it and they kind of find it hard to believe. But active — and I encountered this a lot — is women saying, “It can’t be that bad.” And some of these women are gynecologists, like the one who treated my niece who had endometriosis, and the gynecologist told my sister my niece was making everything up.
So, what now?
Griffith’s research has focused on tissue regeneration, and she says understanding endometriosis could be key in furthering our understanding of it.
31
Mar
Trans, gender-diverse people with endometriosis fight ‘double battle’ against pain and lack of recognition
Menstrual-related condition affects 1 in 10 people with a uterus — but is usually seen as affecting women only
Julie Landry * CBC News
Posted: Mar 31, 2021
The day Sally Zori went to the hospital in Vancouver for their hysterectomy, the journey from the registration desk to the operating table was punctuated by astonished questions about their name, their ID, their gender and their appearance.
Zori, a transgender person who was assigned female at birth, was suffering from the excruciating pain of endometriosis and opted to have a hysterectomy to relieve the symptoms. But their interaction with hospital staff before the operation elicited a different kind of pain.
“[The nurse] hands me a pink hospital gown and leads me to the women’s locker-room to change. I look at her and say, ‘Don’t you think it would be a better idea to take me to the men’s locker-room?'” recalls Zori, 35.
Zori has not had lower surgery, but they have a beard and no breasts. “I am very clearly 100 per cent a man,” they say.
“For me, the biggest challenge was the constant having to prove who I was, a legitimate human. And I notice this across the board in the medical field.”
1 in 10
For those people with a uterus who don’t identify as a woman, such dehumanizing experiences make it even more difficult to live with endometriosis, a menstrual-related condition causing agonizing pain that has been little researched and is often misdiagnosed.
Zori, who lives in Vancouver, had experienced painful periods their whole life, but didn’t know they had endometriosis until they ended up in the emergency room due to the pain. They were quickly referred to a specialist who confirmed the diagnosis.
Endometriosis affects one in 10 people with a uterus. It occurs when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus implants in the pelvic cavity to form lesions, cysts and other growths, according to Endometriosis Network Canada. This can cause pain, internal scarring, infertility and other medical complications.
Relatively little research has been done on the causes, treatment and a potential cure for the condition, which has left many women who suffer from it short of physical, mental and emotional support.
But the struggle for recognition is even greater for transgender and gender-diverse people with the condition, who feel forgotten because endometriosis is often seen as a problem only for women.
Many are now demanding greater inclusivity in the fight to get endometriosis better recognized by health-care workers and researchers.
Surprise diagnosis
Some people think their gender was likely the reason they lived with endometriosis longer than they should have.
Like Zori, Eli — CBC has agreed not to use their last name because they don’t want to be identified in their workplace — only found out they had the condition when they ended up in a Vancouver hospital. In Eli’s case, it was after emergency surgery.
“It was a total surprise,” says Eli, 33, who identifies as non-binary.
Eli, who lives in Vancouver, says endometriosis was never considered in their case, even though they had endured common symptoms of the condition for years, including chronic pain in the neck and lower back and intense pelvic pain during their period.
“I do often wonder if I was more stereotypical cis female presenting, if that would have been linked, because it just wasn’t in my case,” says Eli, who continues to suffer chronic pain, affecting the amount of work they can do every day.
‘Super-gendered disease’
For Terri, another endometriosis sufferer, the pain of menstruation seemed to evoke the pain felt living in the body they were assigned at birth — a form of distress known as gender dysphoria.
“I would even say that maybe it was because of the endometriosis that I realized I was non-binary because it gave me so much trouble. Maybe if I had had a normal period it would have had a completely different outcome,” says Terri, whose last name CBC has agreed to withhold because their family doesn’t yet know Terri is non-binary.
Terri ended up in the emergency room several times due to the pain of endometriosis and eventually had to stop working. The suffering and stress caused by the condition led to suicidal thoughts, they say.
Terri, who lives in Toronto, has been given a respite from the physical pain thanks to a combination of medication and an intrauterine device. But the mental and emotional toll of constantly having to explain their gender and condition remains.
“Sometimes it’s exhausting having to explain to everyone and having to educate everyone … Not only on gender, but also on endometriosis, especially since it’s a super-gendered disease. It’s like a double battle,” Terri says.
They would like to be able to navigate a more inclusive health-care system and support groups, including information and awareness sessions with medical staff.
“The language needs to change a bit to include other people,” Terri says.
Available support
That’s one of the tasks being undertaken by Trans Care B.C., the first provincial body responsible for supporting a network of gender-affirming care.
Nurse educator Lauren Goldman is one of the organization’s staff developing training materials, also available online, for medical providers to feel more confident treating transgender and gender-diverse patients.
She says Trans Care B.C. can help patients connect with a health provider who is comfortable and has experience working with such patients.
But Goldman agrees there is much to improve.
“We know that gender-diverse people experience health inequities that are related to sexual and reproductive health care,” she says.
“Many patients share that they have experiences of significant body dysphoria and a lot of physical and emotional discomfort during physical exams, inadequate screening and also low service expectations.”
‘Endo warriors’
Endometriosis advocacy groups have already taken steps to address the added challenges faced by gender-diverse people living with the condition.
The website for Endometriosis Network Canada, for example, makes it clear that it’s not exclusively a “women’s condition.”
The organization’s blog co-ordinator, Maia Leggott, wrote a widely shared article for the website titled, It’s Time for the Endometriosis Community to Drop Gendered Language, which proposes, among other things, using the term “endo warriors” as a term of solidarity instead of “endo sisters.”
Leggott, a cisgender woman, admits she had to learn to use more inclusive language. She follows support groups and sometimes sees tough interactions between cisgender women and trans and non-binary people.
“It’s not always easy and it takes a lot of emotional labour for trans and non-binary folks to constantly be defending their identity,” Leggott says.
Human first
Zori’s hysterectomy was ultimately successful in stopping the symptoms of endometriosis.
But they still dream of a world where everyone is seen as human first. They would like medical forms to contain more than “male” and “female” checkboxes, but many boxes or one where each situation can be explained.
And they want an open endometriosis community in which no one feels sidelined because of their identity. After all, Sally says, women themselves have been marginalized for centuries.
“Now it’s time for us to include all the rest of the marginalized people,” Sally says.
31
Mar
Transgender People with Endometriosis Often Suffer in Silence
By Laken Brooks
October 14, 2021
Before reading this article, you may consider referring to these vocabulary terms:
Because health researchers tend to label menstrual illnesses as “women’s diseases,” some trans people may not recognize their symptoms as warning signs for endometriosis.
Being diagnosed with endometriosis can make you feel like you’re invisible. Historically, doctors have underestimated menstrual pain. But transgender and nonbinary patients often face an additional layer of frustration as they fight for equitable healthcare.
We need better reproductive education
One major obstacle for all menstruating people is the dearth of reproductive education. In middle school, I and my female-identifying friends were shuffled off to a basement classroom where a kind nurse showed us pads, told us how to tie a jacket around our waists to hide leaks, and warned us against having sex. Many sex ed courses, like the one I experienced, do not describe important anatomical details of a period: how the texture and color of your blood can change, how to differentiate between normal cramps or something more serious, and how much bleeding is normal.
Challenges for transgender students
Many children are left to discover these important reproductive realities on their own. I had never heard the word “endometriosis” until I was in my twenties. But transgender students carry an especially heavy burden. Because sex ed courses often divide up male and female students, transgender adolescents fall through the gaps. If a transgender student attends the sex ed course that corresponds with their genitalia, that student may risk outing themselves. They may feel unwelcome in a “girl’s class” when they do not identify as a girl. Therefore, some trans students miss out on important lessons about their periods.
Recognizing endometriosis warning signs
Because health researchers tend to label menstrual illnesses as “women’s diseases”, some trans people may not recognize their symptoms as warning signs for endometriosis. It’s difficult to know just how many trans patients suffer in silence with endometriosis. In fact, only a handful of scientific studies have analyzed the topic. But in a 2020 article in Journal of Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology, researchers found that the majority of trans people with endometriosis are diagnosed after they’ve transitioned their gender.1 Even after a transgender male patient begins testosterone therapy, he can still have painful symptoms and complications in his uterus.
Delayed diagnosis
Although transgender people can also experience endometriosis, they are less likely than cisgender women to seek diagnosis. Why? Many patients rely on their OB/GYN to perform tests and assess their risk for endometriosis. But most transgender people do not feel safe when visiting a gynecologist. Some reasons why these patients may feel uncomfortable include the following: gendered intake forms, medical discrimination, judgmental doctors, and harassment.
Researchers in Ontario interviewed transgender men in their community to ask about their experiences with gynecological care.2 Of this group, 92% of patients were anxious about visiting a gynecologist. More seriously, 54% had actively avoided getting screenings, pap smears, or other important treatments. Without visiting a gynecologist, transgender people face an uphill battle in getting diagnosed for endometriosis.
How medical professionals can meet the needs of trans patients
Fortunately, medical professionals and health advocates can be better allies. Here are some suggestions for how you can be more inclusive to transgender endometriosis patients:
Endometriosis isn’t just a woman’s issue — it’s a human issue. And together, we can push to make menstrual care and education more accessible to every person of every gender.
31
Mar
Hey all, just wanted to let you know that I have discovered an issue with font rendering on this website. I’m correcting blog entries as I discover them. I’m going to have to go back to pasting articles into a different word processor and cleaning them up there before pasting into Word Press here.
As always, I use this blog as a sort of archive for everything endometriosis, and sometimes I do not have a lot of time to spend on this site, so I do a hasty copy-paste. I apologise. I do always make sure you have the source link to the actual news article, magazine article, biography or research report, though.
Much love to my endo siblings, stay strong!
26
Mar
France formally recognises endometriosis as ‘long-term condition’
The bill was passed unanimously through parliament. It means that all costs of care and treatment for the painful condition will now be covered by the state
14 January 2022
By Hannah Thompson
Endometriosis, a painful and debilitating condition that affects 1 in 10 women in France, has been formally recognised as a ‘long-term condition’ by the French parliament.
A “long-term condition” (affection longue durée (ALD)) in France means that care and treatment for the illness is completely covered by l’Assurance maladie.
The bill was put forward by political party (far-left) La France Insoumise, and l’Assemblée Nationale voted it through unanimously yesterday (January 13), with 111 votes for, and zero against.
MP for Seine-Saint-Denis Clémentine Autain, who presented the bill and wanted to have the definition “set in stone”, said the vote was “a giant step forward for millions of women”.
She said: “We can create a raft of rights for women who suffer. [This will especially help] poorly-paid women, those in precarious conditions, and the poorest [for whom the illness] is even more difficult to live with.”
Endometriosis is a disorder where tissue that usually lines the inside of the uterus grows outside the uterus, usually in the ovaries, fallopian tubes and pelvis. It can cause pain, bleeding, irritation, scar tissue, and even fibrous adhesions that can cause organs to stick together.
It can cause painful periods, pain during sex, painful bowel movements, excessive bleeding, fatigue, digestive issues, nausea, and infertility.
It can be difficult to diagnose and it still takes an average of seven years before women are diagnosed correctly.
The ALD decision comes two days after President Emmanuel Macron announced the launching of a national strategy to combat the illness.
He stated: “It’s not only a ‘women’s problem’. It’s society’s problem.”
The national plan will aim to boost understanding and awareness of the issue, as well as improve diagnosis rates and treatment plans.
26
Mar
The Worldwide Endometriosis March is LIVE now at:
S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ||||||
2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 |
0 - Pain Free
1 - Very minor annoyance -
occasional
minor twinges.
No medication needed.
2 - Minor Annoyance -
occasional
strong twinges.
No medication needed.
3 - Annoying enough to be distracting.
Mild painkillers are effective.
(Aspirin, Ibuprofen.)
4 - Can be ignored if you are really
involved in your work, but still
distracting. Mild painkillers relieve
pain for 3-4 hours.
5 - Can't be ignored for more than 30
minutes. Mild painkillers reduce
pain for 3-4 hours.
6 - Can't be ignored for any length of
time, but you can still go to work and
participate in social activities.
Stronger painkillers (Codeine,
Vicodin) reduce pain for 3-4 hours.
7 - Makes it difficult to concentrate,
interferes with sleep. You can still
function with effort. Strongest
painkillers relieve pain (Oxycontin,
Morphine)
8 - Physical activity severely limited.
You can read and converse with effort.
Nausea and dizziness set in as factors
of pain. Stronger painkillers are
minimally effective. Strongest painkillers
reduce pain for 3-4 hours.
9 - Unable to speak. Crying out or
moaning uncontrollably - near delirium.
Strongest painkillers are only partially
effective.
10 - Unconscious. Pain makes you
pass out. Strongest painkillers are only
partially effective.
© Andrea Mankoski