Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forum'Disgusting' study rating attractiveness of women with endometriosis retracted by medical journal
Source: The Guardian
Fertility and Sterility took seven years to take down Italian study, which was criticised by doctors for ethical concerns and dubious justifications
Gabrielle Jackson
@gabriellecj
Published on Wed 5 Aug 2020 08.34 BST
A widely criticised peer-reviewed study that measured the attractiveness of women with endometriosis has been retracted from the medical journal Fertility and Sterility.
The study, Attractiveness of women with rectovaginal endometriosis: a case-control study, was first published in 2013 and has been defended by the authors and the journal in the intervening years despite heavy criticism from doctors, other researchers and people with endometriosis for its ethical concerns and dubious justifications, with one advocate calling the study heartbreaking and disgusting.
The studys conclusion was: Women with rectovaginal endometriosis were judged to be more attractive than those in the two control groups. Moreover, they had a leaner silhouette, larger breasts, and an earlier coitarche. Coitarche is the age at first sexual intercourse.
Rectovaginal endometriosis is a severe form of the disease in which tissue similar to the lining of the uterus called endometrium grows outside the uterus, often attaching to other organs and causing pain, scarring and sometimes infertility. One in 10 women and other people with a uterus of reproductive age have the disease.
The women taking in part in the study had not given their consent to be judged for their attractiveness and did not know this was happening as part of their medical consultations. The study received ethics approval and was publicly funded by the University of Milan school of medicine. The authors asked the women about their sexual history and measured their body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio and breast-to-underbreast ratio. Only Caucasian women were selected for inclusion in the study.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/aug/05/disgusting-study-rating-attractiveness-of-women-with-endometriosis-retracted-by-medical-journal
______________________________________________________________________
Source: The Independent
I fail to understand how a small group of Italian doctors rating attractiveness of women with different stages of endometriosis contributes anything to medical science, says gynaecologist
Maya Oppenheim Women's Correspondent @mayaoppenheim
4 hours ago
A study that judged the attractiveness of women who suffer from endometriosis has been pulled from a medical journal after sparking outrage.
The women who contributed to the peer-reviewed research, titled Attractiveness of women with rectovaginal endometriosis: a case-control study, never provided their consent to be rated by their appearance and were unaware this was going on.
Rectovaginal endometriosis affects roughly five to 12 per cent of women who have endometriosis a common disorder that affects around 176 million women worldwide and can put sufferers in severe pain with bowel movements.
One in 10 women of reproductive age in the UK has endometriosis, a condition when tissue similar to that which grows inside of the uterus grows outside of the uterus attaching itself to other organs and causing a great deal of pain and leading to other issues such as infertility.
The controversial study, published in the journal Fertility and Sterility, concluded: Women with rectovaginal endometriosis were judged to be more attractive than those in the two control groups. Moreover, they had a leaner silhouette, larger breasts, and an earlier coitarche. Coitarche is the age at which someone first engages in sexual intercourse.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/endometriosis-women-attractiveness-fertility-and-sterility-journal-a9655776.html
I_UndergroundPanther
(12,934 posts)It's a very painful disease.
I had a hysterectomy
(Uterus removal )when I was 29. Around 6 years ater I got both ovaries out because they were cystic and one chocolate cyst was as big as a Coke can before medical assistance( United healthcare) would cover the surgery. During the ovary removal it was discovered that endrometrosis
Tissue was growing all over my abdomen,stuck to my intestines,
bladder,ureters,abdominal wall it was everywhere. Just insane. Luckily the surgeon I had was very skilled. It turned out I was in surgery for like 10 hours.
For anyone with endrometrosis I have an herbal tea I mixed up and it helped the pain.
2 parts mugwort herb
1 part muellin herb
1 part catnip.
You can add in valerian root to deal with any anxiety too.
It really helps. Drink it with some honey and orange peel or something to mask the flavor a little.
Especially if you add the valerian root.
Karadeniz
(23,417 posts)I_UndergroundPanther
(12,934 posts)One thing about my transgender issue is ever since puberty my body was at war with itself physically and mentally.
When I needed physical help,there was no surgery available that I could afford. So I didn't persue it.
But it happened anyway.
A weird example of the changes from before and after surgery.
When I was a kid I had curly hair. After puberty it was stalk straight,after the surgeries to remove ovaries,uterus , endrometrosis and top surgery ,my hair is curly again. Just like before puberty. And I am at peace inside. Mentally and physically.
Most people do not understand being transgender sometimes has a real physical conflict with it too.
MaryMagdaline
(7,879 posts)MaryMagdaline
(7,879 posts)Two close friends of mind have endometriosis. One has growths throughout the body, around her lungs and chest, other organs. She is in terrible pain.
We often lament the lack of research in this area.
I_UndergroundPanther
(12,934 posts)My heart goes out to them. It must hurt so much.
Because white hetero too often Christian men still control so much in medicine and research,the needs of women,people of color and transpeople don't get the help we need
Because researching something like endrometrosis does not get the attention or research money it needs to create better treatments for us.