Menstrual pain almost as bad as heart attack
"Nobody thinks menstrual cramps is an important public health issue"
Women suffer through menstrual cramps every month in silence, so why is it that something so important is neglected because it's a taboo?
No, women don't complain for the heck of it, menstrual cramps are hellish to say the least and now there's a study to prove it. According to the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), painful menstruation interferes with the daily life of one in five women. Even with such a significant number of women suffering, very little research has been done regarding the condition.
5 myths about menstruation
Women are prescribed ibuprofen to ease the pain, but that's not the adequate solution.
While menstrual pain varies from person to person, John Guillebaud, professor of reproductive health at University College London, told Quartz that some patients have described their cramps as "almost as bad as a heart attack."
Frank Tu, director of gynecological pain at NorthShore University HealthSystem says that some physicians are taught ibuprofen "should be good enough." The AAFP claims that drugs such as aspirin and paracetamol may reduce pain in the short term, although few studies have been of good quality.
Writer for Quartz, Olivia Goldhill describes her experience with menstrual cramps, and notes that too many doctors are dismissive when presented with the symptoms.
Women’s health: Gynaecological cancers, a worry at PIMS
When the pain gets recurrent and unbearable, many gynecologists prescribe their patients with birth control, without any breaks. The result of this is that you won't menstruate altogether. The risks of taking birth control pills is blood clotting and the possibility of breast cancer, which is why many women refrain from it and try to cope with their menstrual pain.
Not only does menstruation cause painful cramps for women, but some experience depression, migraines and even vomiting, when on their period. Unfortunately, no one manages to get clear answers from their doctors.
Why do some women experience more menstrual pain than others?
Women, wages and exploitation
“That’s a million dollar question that we don’t really understand,” Richard Legro, MD, of Penn State College of Medicine, tells Quartz.
Legro and fellow researchers found that surprisingly, Viagra could be used to treat menstrual cramps. “We published our results in a high-impact OB-GYN journal and we feel we made a major contribution to treatment that everyday practitioners could use,” he says.
However, his research is far from over. Much more information is needed before it can be approved as a treatment, but no one will fund his study. “I’ve applied three or four times but it always gets rejected,” he says.
“I think the bottom line is that nobody thinks menstrual cramps is an important public health issue,” he added.
Why is menstrual pain largely ignored in medicine?
“Men don’t get it and it hasn’t been given the centrality it should have. I do believe it’s something that should be taken care of, like anything else in medicine,” says Guillebaud.
Moreover, symptoms can fade after childbirth. As “mother nature” can solve the problem, perhaps researchers who “want to make their name” don’t consider it an important enough area to do research, he says.
Many women are doctors as well however, and even they choose to trivialise menstrual pain. “I think it happens with both genders of doctor. On the one hand, men don’t suffer the pain and underestimate how much it is or can be in some women. But I think some women doctors can be a bit unsympathetic because either they don’t get it themselves or if they do get it they think, ‘Well I can live with it, so can my patient,’" says Guillebaud.
What can we do?
The only way to give menstrual pain the research it so desperately needs, is by talking about it, explains Guillebaud. “We need to talk about it on Oprah and national TV,” he says.
No, women don't complain for the heck of it, menstrual cramps are hellish to say the least and now there's a study to prove it. According to the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), painful menstruation interferes with the daily life of one in five women. Even with such a significant number of women suffering, very little research has been done regarding the condition.
5 myths about menstruation
Women are prescribed ibuprofen to ease the pain, but that's not the adequate solution.
While menstrual pain varies from person to person, John Guillebaud, professor of reproductive health at University College London, told Quartz that some patients have described their cramps as "almost as bad as a heart attack."
Frank Tu, director of gynecological pain at NorthShore University HealthSystem says that some physicians are taught ibuprofen "should be good enough." The AAFP claims that drugs such as aspirin and paracetamol may reduce pain in the short term, although few studies have been of good quality.
Writer for Quartz, Olivia Goldhill describes her experience with menstrual cramps, and notes that too many doctors are dismissive when presented with the symptoms.
Women’s health: Gynaecological cancers, a worry at PIMS
When the pain gets recurrent and unbearable, many gynecologists prescribe their patients with birth control, without any breaks. The result of this is that you won't menstruate altogether. The risks of taking birth control pills is blood clotting and the possibility of breast cancer, which is why many women refrain from it and try to cope with their menstrual pain.
Not only does menstruation cause painful cramps for women, but some experience depression, migraines and even vomiting, when on their period. Unfortunately, no one manages to get clear answers from their doctors.
Why do some women experience more menstrual pain than others?
Women, wages and exploitation
“That’s a million dollar question that we don’t really understand,” Richard Legro, MD, of Penn State College of Medicine, tells Quartz.
Legro and fellow researchers found that surprisingly, Viagra could be used to treat menstrual cramps. “We published our results in a high-impact OB-GYN journal and we feel we made a major contribution to treatment that everyday practitioners could use,” he says.
However, his research is far from over. Much more information is needed before it can be approved as a treatment, but no one will fund his study. “I’ve applied three or four times but it always gets rejected,” he says.
“I think the bottom line is that nobody thinks menstrual cramps is an important public health issue,” he added.
Why is menstrual pain largely ignored in medicine?
“Men don’t get it and it hasn’t been given the centrality it should have. I do believe it’s something that should be taken care of, like anything else in medicine,” says Guillebaud.
Moreover, symptoms can fade after childbirth. As “mother nature” can solve the problem, perhaps researchers who “want to make their name” don’t consider it an important enough area to do research, he says.
Many women are doctors as well however, and even they choose to trivialise menstrual pain. “I think it happens with both genders of doctor. On the one hand, men don’t suffer the pain and underestimate how much it is or can be in some women. But I think some women doctors can be a bit unsympathetic because either they don’t get it themselves or if they do get it they think, ‘Well I can live with it, so can my patient,’" says Guillebaud.
What can we do?
The only way to give menstrual pain the research it so desperately needs, is by talking about it, explains Guillebaud. “We need to talk about it on Oprah and national TV,” he says.