The cycle Confronting the pain of periods and PMDD

Shalene Gupta

Book - 2024

"A groundbreaking exploration of a debilitating disorder that's underdiagnosed and misunderstood. Most days, Shalene Gupta was the person she'd always aspired to be. She was hardworking, excelled at work, and had a long-term boyfriend who she desperately loved. Then, every month like clockwork, it all came crashing down in fits of rage and inconsolable sorrow. Work became meaningless, and she struggled to get through the day. The lows were subterranean. After years of struggling to get an answer from doctors, Shalene learned she was one of millions who live with premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), a severe form of PMS. The physical and mental effects of this disorder are undeniable, but for decades some doctors didn'...t even consider PMDD a real condition. How could so many people be suffering at the hands of a chronic condition that doesn't even exist? The Cycle uncovers a hidden epidemic, delivering the definitive portrait of a widespread chronic illness most people haven't even heard of. From a historical overview of feminist debates, to on-the-ground interviews and a searing critique of menstrual stigma, Shalene Gupta lays out how disregard for this disorder has left too many people scrambling for appropriate healthcare. Deeply researched, movingly intimate, and refreshingly hopeful, this book is essential reading for any curious reader, especially those navigating a world ill-equipped to support their health"--

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612.662/Gupta
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2nd Floor New Shelf 612.662/Gupta (NEW SHELF) Due Jul 20, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Published
New York : Flatiron Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Shalene Gupta (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 230 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 209-230).
ISBN
9781250882899
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The PMDD Problem
  • Chapter 2. The Periodic Silence Around Menstruation
  • Chapter 3. The Brief, Sensational History of PMS
  • Chapter 4. The Diagnosis Blind Spot
  • Chapter 5. The Treatment Void
  • Chapter 6. Making Work Work
  • Chapter 7. It's Not You, Its Me (and PMDD)
  • Chapter 8. What Next?
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix A. Research Criteria for LLPDD in DSM-III-R
  • Appendix B. Research Criteria for PMDD in DSM-IV
  • Appendix C. Diagnostic Criteria for PMDD in DSM-5
  • Notes
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A well-informed look at a misunderstood disorder. Journalist Gupta, who suffers from premenstrual dysphoric disorder, offers a close look at the medical, social, and psychological issues surrounding the diagnosis and treatment of menstrual disorders, with the hope that her findings will help the "3 to 8 percent of menstruators" who meet the criteria for this severe syndrome. Too often, she reports, "the never-ending loop of social stigma against menstruation" means that such disorders go untreated. Cultural prejudices and sexism within the medical system have led some women with PMDD--and even Gupta, at times--to doubt their experiences. Her own suffering--which included depression so severe that she became suicidal, as well as angry, violent fights with her boyfriends--persisted for over a decade before she received a diagnosis, and then she spent a year trying to find the proper medications that would alleviate the symptoms. Gupta provides an overview of the menstrual cycle and its effects on many women. Premenstrual syndrome, experienced by about 48% of women, is characterized by physical symptoms such as bloating and insomnia, as well as psychological symptoms such as mood swings and premenstrual mood exacerbation, in which preexisting psychological symptoms, such as depression, get worse during menstruation. Beginning in the 1980s, when little research on PMDD was available and it was often conflated with PMS, debate swirled over whether to include PMDD in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Some medical practitioners were opposed, fearing that the diagnosis would victimize women by turning "a regular biological event into a mental disorder." In 2013, it was finally included, and in 2019, the World Health Organization recognized PMDD as a diagnosis in its International Classification of Diseases. With ample evidence from her own life, Gupta ably depicts the reality and intensity of an affliction that rages into a monthly "emotional storm." An informative melding of memoir and research. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.