Living with Endometriosis: A Narrative Experience and Commentary

In: Women's Health Reports · 2026 · vol. 7 · doi:10.1177/26884844261431987 · W7141990743
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AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-07

This narrative review combines personal experience with literature to identify eight major challenges in endometriosis diagnosis and care, including diagnostic delays, pain assessment, and limited treatment options.

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Abstract

Background: Endometriosis is a chronic, systemic, inflammatory disease with a prevalence likely higher-than-reported due to diagnostic challenges. Characterized by the growth of endometrial-like tissue outside the uterus, endometriosis often causes pain, abnormal bleeding and infertility, frequently resulting in significant diagnostic delays and impaired quality of life. Objective: To humanize the experience of living with endometriosis through a personal narrative, and to identify key challenges in diagnosis and management within an advanced health care system, supported by a review of global literature. To raise awareness among clinicians around the world as to the complexities of endometriosis, its diagnosis, and treatment. Methods: This narrative review and commentary combine the lived experience of one author (C.A.P.) with a synthesis of salient literature. Eight major challenges in endometriosis pathogenesis and care are identified and discussed, integrating personal testimony with evidence from national and international studies. Results: The narrative highlights persistent gaps in menstrual health education and the “normalization” of severe menstrual pain. Diagnostic delays for endometriosis average eight years; patients often see multiple providers before the diagnosis. Clinical challenges include subjective and poorly quantified pain assessment, fragmented electronic medical records, limited access to minimally invasive diagnostic surgery, insufficient research funding, financial burdens, and restricted treatment options. The disease imposes direct and indirect costs on individuals and the health care system, disrupts education and employment, and is associated with psychological distress. Despite therapeutic advances, no cure exists, and treatment options remain limited. Patients may experience recurrent symptoms and ongoing challenges with activities of daily living. Conclusions: Endometriosis is a complex, under-recognized disease with profound impacts on physical, psychological, social, and economic well-being. Addressing educational gaps, improving clinician awareness, enhancing access to specialized care, developing multidisciplinary approaches, and increasing research funding can improve outcomes for those living with endometriosis.

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endometriosisinfertility

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