Endometriosis activists in N.L. are raising awareness of their debilitating condition - Action News
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Endometriosis activists in N.L. are raising awareness of their debilitating condition

People with endometriosis are calling for a national action plan about the disease, which causes extreme pain. According to the the Endometriosis Network of Canada, 2 million Canadians have the disease, which often goes misdiagnosed for years.

According to the the Endometriosis Network of Canada, 2 million Canadians have the disease

A woman clutches her abdomen
According to the the Endometriosis Network of Canada, approximately two million people in the country have the disease. (Andrey_Popov/Shutterstock)

Those suffering fromendometriosis,a uterine disease, want to see more national awareness of the illness.

Katie Luciani, executive director of the Endometriosis Network of Canada, is calling for a national action plan to promote a better understanding for the disease and a path to diagnosing people.

"Endometriosis affects every aspect of a person's life, not only physical pain, it's that psychological, emotional impact," she said.

According to the World Health Organization, endometriosis affects an estimated one in 10 people with uteruses. The chronic disease happenswhen tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus, which causes severe pain, as well as bloating, nausea and even infertility, among other symptoms.

Lucianisaid people often wait years fora diagnosis, waiting for decades at times to find out what's happening with their bodies.

LISTEN |Three activistswho live with endometriosis share their struggles to get diagnosed:

This morning we talked about endometriosis, and why it's concerning that you likely know very little about this life-altering condition. We spoke with advocates Stephanie Blackwood, Sharon Ozon, and Katie Luciani.

Sharon Ozonof St. John's said she started experiencing extreme pain when she was 12.

"Debilitating pain," said Ozon. "I had a lot of painful periods and it would last for two or three weeks in a month. And nobody really knew what was happening with me."

It took her 30 years to get diagnosed with endometriosis, which included traveling to Ontario for care and seeing several doctors who kept misdiagnosing her, she said.

Woman with short brown hair wearing blue and glasses, smiling.
Sharon Ozon is organizing Newfoundland and Labrador's first Run to End Endo to promote greater awareness of endometritis. (CBC)

Stephanie Blackwood, who runs theNewfoundland Endometriosis Support Groupon Facebook, said she was 23 when she started voicing her concerns to a doctor.

She said the pain "would sometimes, very often, take you off your feet, even to the point of causing vomiting."

Luciani said she missed out on school, work and other important moments while being told that her period was normal, that she needed to take a pain reliever or that it was in her head.

"Unfortunately, this is just such a common narrative in the endometriosis community," said Luciani.

Years to get diagnosed

Both Ozon and Blackwood said it took seeing several different doctors before they were diagnosed.

Luciani said a person's first barrier to getting a diagnosis is if an individual's primary-care provider isn't familiar with endometriosis.

According to the Endometriosis Network of Canada, two millionpeople in the country have the disease. Luciani said there is a lack of knowledge in both the health-care system and society about endometritis.

On her Facebook support group, Blackwoodsaid, she hears a lot of frustration from people who are looking for information on how to cope and treat the disease.

"We're hearing people looking for answers and specifically, they're looking for pain management techniques," said Blackwood.

When people finally get a diagnosis, there are still wait times for treatment, which can include surgery, something she said is a big decision to make. Different medications also have different side effects.

Not everyone has the same symptoms, said Luciani, and not all pain management techniques work on everyone.

The disease causes physical pain but there is also the mental aspect to it, like depression, anxiety and thoughts of suicide, she said.

Woman with blond hair and green jacket and black shirt
Stephanie Blackwood, who runs the Endometriosis N.L. Support Group on Facebook, says she was struggling with her daily life in her early 20s before she spoke with her doctor. (CBC)

Blackwood said it can make people feel powerless.

"It almost gets to a feeling of 'you just don't have control over your own body.' It's separating you from that, which is really frustrating not being able to control not just the pain but the hormones, the reactions. Not knowing what's real, what's not."

Blackwood said endometriosis isn't something that happens only during a period, which for most is an average of five days a month. People with endometriosis can have longer periods and ovulation can also cause flare ups. There was a point when she only had one week out of the month where she felt alright.

"My symptoms lasted for a full year before I got the incision surgery. So I was bleedingfor 365 days," said Ozon.

Ozon is also organizing N.L.'s first Run to End Endo event, which she said is meant toraiseawareness of endometriosis.

It takes place June 2 in St. John's.

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With files from The St. Johns Morning Show