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“The most lonely condition I can imagine”: Psychosocial impacts of endometriosis on women’s identity

journal contribution
posted on 2021-10-04, 23:08 authored by Jennifer M Cole, Sarah Grogan, Emma TurleyEmma Turley
Endometriosis is a condition which affects around 1–2% of women worldwide and has profound effects on their everyday lives. Previous research has tended to focus on physical symptoms (such as chronic pain); how women manage changes to their identity and relationships as a result of endometriosis has received less attention. This paper discusses qualitative data examining how women negotiate changes to identity while living with endometriosis, in a social context where women are expected to minimise their symptoms and conform to feminine role expectations. We conducted thematic analysis of 34 replies to an online survey seeking qualitative text responses. The women identified disruptions to personal identity as a result of living with endometriosis. They talked about not feeling like themselves (Theme 1) and about reactions from medical and social connections prompting feelings that they were going “mad” (Theme 2). Participants also expressed feeling as though they were a burden to loved ones (Theme 3), which often resulted in self-silencing (Theme 4). Findings are discussed in the context of Western expectations of women’s roles in social relationships and suggest that professionals who support women with endometriosis should be aware of strategies such as self-silencing which may reduce effective self-care.

History

Volume

31

Issue

2

Start Page

171

End Page

191

Number of Pages

21

eISSN

1461-7161

ISSN

0959-3535

Publisher

SAGE

Additional Rights

CC BY-NC

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

External Author Affiliations

Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Feminism and Psychology

Article Number

ARTN 0959353520930602