Get the top three things to know in women's health + wellness, every weekday:

What Happens If You Still Have Pain After Endo Surgery?

What: Baffler’s Jess McAllen has a deep dive worth spending your time on describing her journey getting diagnosed and surgical treatment for endometriosis. The piece includes many good lines, but I particularly liked this one: “In medicine, as in the culture at large, women’s pain is often treated like the drone of a nearby mosquito: constant and annoying, but an inevitable part of nature.”

Why it matters: McAllen looks at the “cottage industry operating mostly on social media has sprung up” in the absence of good information, and how it affects women who end up going under the knife, especially given that “the recurrence rate of endo tissue after surgery can be as high as 67 percent, yet some surgeons promote their operations as a panacea in jaunty posts and videos.”

SourceBaffler

More News Snippets
Saving the Tiniest Babies

Advances in neonatal care now make it possible to save extremely premature babies, some born as early as 22 weeks.

The Birth Rate Fallacy

Experts explaining that the global drop in fertility rates is partly a product of women having children later in life.

OBGYN Pain Goes Beyond IUDs

Sharing the stories of women who have had fibroids removed without pain medication or endometriosis symptoms ignored for years.

Alcohol’s Lies (and Breast Cancer)

A deep dive on drinking and examining why people reacted far more swiftly to the news that smoking causes cancer than they have for alcohol—especially breast cancer.

Could Ozempic Prevent Fibroids?

Women with type 2 diabetes who got a GLP-1 medication were less likely to develop new fibroids than women who just took metformin, a diabetes medication.

Another Mother Dead Thanks to Abortion Bans

Josseli Barnica was excited to be pregnant with her second child but suffered a miscarriage at 17 weeks. Instead of helping the miscarriage progress, doctors let her suffer for 40 hours because her fetus still had a heartbeat.