Women of reproductive age are a third of our population (18 million in England!) - most of these women have periods.
And periods going wrong is really common! 2/23
1 in 4 women experience heavy menstrual bleeding.
You often bleed through sanitary products super fast. You bleed onto your clothes, onto furniture. It's *excruciatingly* embarrassing.
Many women with heavy bleeding don't leave house during their periods. 3/23
1 in 5 (20%) women experience severely painful periods. You can't study or work - often you just want to curl into a ball and stay there forever. Sometimes the pain is so bad, women faint or vomit.
Plus between 50%-75% women experience some pain. 4/23
Periods change over time. Heavy bleeding & pain peak when your periods start - so when you're a teenager & into early twenties. An important time in a girl's life.
Heavy bleeding then rears its ugly head again at menopause with a second peak for women in their 40s. 5/23
For some women, pain & heavy bleeding remain terrible throughout adulthood. Often (but not always) the cause is endometriosis, affecting 1 in 10 women. It takes an average of *8* years to be diagnosed - often women are only taken seriously when it affects their fertility. 6/23
There are significant barriers preventing women from seeking help.
The first is that many women simply don't know what is a normal amount of bleeding or pain - so they don't know when their periods are going wrong.
Most think of period pain as something to be endured. 7/23
Even if they recognise that they are suffering from extreme bleeding or pain, many women don't know that treatments exist!
One study estimated that 1.6m women in Japan suffer severe pain - and that most them are NOT getting guideline treatment. 8/23
A paper from *1990* reported that only 55% of women with severe pain took painkillers or the pill for their pain. They thought it *surprising* how many women still suffer in silence without good treatment.
This was written OVER THIRTY YEARS AGO.
How little has changed. 9/23
We still aren't talking about it enough!
Stigma prevents women from seeking care. 48% of young UK girls are embarrassed by their periods. We don't talk about it to each other.
It's WHY we don't know what's normal or that there are treatments. 10/23
Even if we do seek care, women are often not taking seriously.
And it's not just period pain - women with the same chest pain symptoms as men take longer to be seen, less likely to receive painkillers & more likely to be diagnoses with anxiety! 11/23
Up to a third of girls/young women regularly miss days of school or university.
Those who go but in pain do less well. Imagine the impact of missing a few days of school every month? of doing an important exam in excruciating pain? 12/23
A US study estimated 600 million working lost every year to period pain. Studies in US & Japan put annual cost at $billions.
Lost productivity of women in work but in pain is even higher than that from missing work.
Women with heavy bleeding more likely to miss work. 13/23
A paper from *1978* said that period pain is the greatest single cause of lost working hours and school days among young women.
Think of all the things that have changed in the last 50 years! Women suffering with periods going wrong has stayed the same. It's insane. 14/23
There are effective treatments for heavy bleeding - but far too few women access them.
For periods - it's painkillers (mainly ibuprofen) or hormonal contraception.
Paracetemol only works for about half of women. Ibuprofen better but doesn't work for 25%-40% of women...15/23
~ 20% of women can't take ibuprofen for medical reasons.
Hormonal contraception is pretty good but doesn't work for ~15% of women. Plus many girls/women don't want to take it for other reasons.
Many teens never access it because they don't know - or feel able - to ask. 16/23
There are other treatments but they are poorly researched or evidenced. Treatments have not really moved on for 40+ years!
One doctor commented that given how bad the pain is where is the research? 17/23
One study showed the diseases that primarily affect men are overfunded and those affecting women underfunded.
This bias over decades (centuries?) has led to conditions affecting mostly women being neglected. Periods are a prime example! 18/23
I did a quick academic literature search.
Over the past 5 years, I found over 3,700 papers on sexual dysfunction in men vs fewer than 1,000 papers on menstrual disorders in women.
Not OK. 19/23
We are at least starting to recognise this! Whether it's periods, menopause, urinary tract infections (the bane of so many women's lives!), urinary incontinence.. you name it, we've stigamatised it.
We're underresearching it, underdiagnosing it and undertreating it.
20/23
And this is all before we talk about period poverty - affecting women here and particularly in low and middle income countries.
In many countries, menstruation is key factor in driving girls out of secondary education. 21/23
Being embarrassed about periods, taboos for women talking about them, men not wanting to know, has all stopped us researching & treating it.
It's wasting women's productivity and potential. Too little has changed in FIFTY YEARS. This has to stop. 22/23
So to go back to the start - in this context, to read that for the (too few) women who make it through to seeking help & actually being referred on, are now having to wait so much longer is awful.
It's a kick in the face. We must stop thinking women's health can wait. 23/23
The pandemic is as bad as it ever was for babies - in year to Aug 2023, 6,300 babies under 1 were admitted to hospital wholly or partly BECAUSE of Covid.
They are ONLY age group where admissions have NOT gone down over time 1/17
Our study, led by Prof @katebrown220, looked at all hospitalisations in England in children with a Covid diagnosis or positive test from Aug 2020-Aug 2023.
We then *excluded* all admissions where a Covid diagnosis was incidental (ie not why they were in hospital)
2/17
Infants (babies under 1) are generally at higher risk from respiratory infections, plus they are the age group that, if infected, are overwhelmingly meeting the virus for the first time.
They are not vaccinated and have not had it before. 3/17
Prof @Kevin_Fong giving the most devastating and moving testimony to the Covid Inquiry of visiting hospital intensive care units at the height of the second wave in late Dec 2020.
The unimaginable scale of death, the trauma, the loss of hope.
Please watch this 2min clip.
And here he breaks down while explaining the absolute trauma experienced by smaller hospitals in particular - the "healthier" ICU patients were transferred out, leaving them coping with so much death.
They felt so alone.
Here Prof Fong explains how every nurse he met was traumatised by watching patients die, being only able to hold up ipads to their relatives and how it went against their normal practice of trying to ensure a dignified death, with family there.
🧵War causes direct civilian deaths but also indirect deaths over the following years.
Recent paper estimates eventual total direct & indirect deaths in Gaza attributable to the war - 10% of entire pop'n.
I want to explain these estimates and why deaths must be counted. 1/13
Why count casualties from war anyway? For moral, legal and strategic reasons.
1 - owe it to those who have died
2 - International law says must count & identify dead as far as possible
3 - monitor progress of war & learn from tactics
2/13
There are direct and indirect casualties of war. Direct deaths include those who killed by fighting or bombs.
Indirect deaths are those that die when they would otherwise have lived because of one or more of: lack of food, healthcare, housing, sanitation, income, hope. 3/13
THREAD: the summer Covid wave in the UK continues.
Basically, there is a LOT of Covid around and not a lot of other respiratory viruses.
If you have cold or flu symptoms, it's probably Covid.
The latest hospital data from England shows steady, quite high levels. 1/8
But admissions don't tell us how much virus is circulating more generally. The best (but imperfect) measure we have is wasterwater measurements, and only in Scotland and not England.
Scotland's wastewater is showing a huge July peak - highest since Omicron's 1st yr in 2022 2/8
Because different people shed different amounts of virus and variants can matter too, you can't for sure infer how many people were infected between different wasterwater peaks. BUT given the size, I'd say it's pretty likely this is the largest peak since 2022 in Scotland 3/8