REFRAMING ENDOMETRIOSIS
We are delighted to share 鈥楻eframing Endometriosis,鈥 a special commissioned illustration from award-winning artist聽. The piece was funded by the British Academy and Wellcome Trust and based on the 鈥,鈥 hosted at 探花直播.
It was the first聽academic conference to bring together an impressive line-up of endometriosis (endo) social science and humanities researchers alongside prominent (bio)medical researchers, patient advocates and authors.聽聽The way endo is framed is key to how it is understood, experienced, treated, and researched. Thus, the conference focused on past, present and future potential framings of endo. 聽
Dr Annalise Weckesser,聽BCU researcher in Medical Anthropology, was convener of the conference and聽undertakes research on gendered experiences of reproductive, sexual, and menstrual health inequalities with the aim of shaping practice, policy, and public debate.
Reframing endometriosis
Artwork by Justyna Green

Reframing Endometriosis
Past: The myth. You have yourself to blame. Fertility.
Present [research]
Future: A whole body condition.
Cure! Funding [broken]. Pain, Stigma, Infertility. We neither die nor recover. [Barriers] Not female enough, not white enough, not disabled enough.
The way endometriosis (endo) is framed is key to how it is understood, experienced, treated, and researched. This piece is based on a British Academy, Wellcome Trust, and 探花直播 2023 conference - Reframing Endometriosis: Power Politics and Potential Futures, Exploring Past, Present and Future Understandings of Endo.
Many endo patients report a health professional has advised 'getting pregnant' to manage or treat their condition. It is a myth rooted in historical medical misogyny and racism.
Endo was referred to as a 鈥渃areer woman's disease鈥 up until the 1990s, based on a myth that it predominantly affected white affluent women who had 鈥減ut off鈥 having children to pursue education and careers.
The Ancient Greek idea of 鈥渉ysteria鈥, where the womb was literally thought to wander throughout the body causing female ailments an irrationality, is alive today in accusations of endo patients as 鈥渉ysterical鈥 and exaggerating their pain.
Endo patients report receiving medical attention when they want to conceive but not when they want to conceive but not when their daily experience, often riddled with pain, is intolerable.
Medical classifications of endo as a gynaecological, menstrual or 鈥渨omen's鈥 disease focus on the uterus. However, symptoms affect the whole body and, ironically, the condition exists when endo tissue is outside of the uterus.
Due to lack of research funding and education, clinicians do not have good options to offer endo patients. There is no easy way to diagnose it, contributing to a diagnostic delay of eight years on average.
Women of colour, lesbian and queer women, trans-masculine, non-binary and intersex individuals, and young people are underserved and excluded from research, patient activism, and media representations. This has severe consequences to their health.
Endo is called 鈥渂enign鈥 because it is not fatal (like cancer). This contributes to it not being taken seriously and undermines the severity of the disease for many.
Hormonal (contraceptive) medications suppress and mask symptoms; they are not a cure. They have many side effects and can't be used when people want to get pregnant.
The heartbreak of trans and gender-diverse people not being seen as endo sufferers. Some report that pain was taken more seriously when presenting as male.
Compounding layers of stigma around pain and infertility.
Research funding for 鈥渨omen's health鈥 remains a fraction of that available for 鈥渕en's health鈥.
Many communities have to fight for their members to be seen and treated, reflecting the colonial nature of how patients are perceived.
There are many silos that keep people concerned about endo from working together, such as divides between clinicians and researchers, specialists and GPs, social scientists and biomedical scientists, and professionals and patient activists.
Endometriosis has long been considered a disease localised to the pelvis. It is now understood to be a whole body condition. Recognising this can lead to improved research, diagnosis and treatment.
A blood test that could more quickly and less invasively diagnose endometriosis is a hoped-for innovation. Novel research has shown that genetics play a role in determining whether you get endo, and that there is a genetic link between endometriosis and other chronic conditions.
The endo community continues to fight for a cure.
The anger of whole communities for being dismissed for decades.
Improving endo care cannot be shouldered by patients alone. Clinicians, researchers, politicians, and patients must work together collaboratively to bring about change.
Explore this rich, detailed tapestry of an illustration.聽Justnya herself is an endo sufferer and has聽聽for her previous work exploring living with condition.聽聽With British Academy support, Justnya attended the conference and has captured key discussions through these vivid images.
To represent the inertia in progress of endo care, the artist used a colour palette that gradually shifts from dark to light. Darker shades are used both in the past (left side of piece) and the present (centre). Lighter shades are only used as we move to the future (right side) with hope for treatment breakthroughs and finding a cure.
Persistent 鈥榚ndo myths,鈥 rooted in medical misogyny and racism, are represented in the piece, including the notion that pregnancy cures endo, the link to ancient notions of a 鈥榳andering womb,鈥 and the ongoing exclusion of many marginalised communities from endo care.聽聽聽Images also represent the scandalous underfunding of research for a disease that affects so many, as well as the severe consequences this has on those living with endo.
Pathways to change are represented via images depicting the need to recognise endo as a whole body (rather than a solely gynaecological) condition and the need for聽truly collaborative research and action that transcends historic and disciplinary silos within the field.聽
Centre for Social Care, Health and Related Research
C-SCHaRR is a community of health and social care professionals, scholars and students who work together to identify, examine and implement evidence-based high-quality health and social care.
Research is informed and guided through service user鈥檚 attitudes, beliefs and experiences and more importantly their involvement in our research through the processes of co-design, co-creation and co-production.
