health

PMS: A serious hormonal issue or just an excuse to be a b*tch?

 

 

 

 

 

 

By JAYASHRI KULKARNI

PMS isn’t real.

Well, according to several recent academic studies it isn’t and as a result, it is starting to become an accepted norm: that when it comes to PMS, women are just ‘looking for an excuse’.

This puzzlingly widespread belief needs challenging, as it perpetuates negative concepts linking female reproduction with negative emotionality.

So why are we having this debate again anyway?

Firstly, many opinions about the existence of PMS are fuelled by personal philosophy and politics, rather than by reason and good research.

Over the centuries, women have had to cope with dismissive views about their anger, depression or capabilities, and being labelled as “irrational” during “that time of the month”.

In the 1970s, feminists fought hard against the concept of hormone influences on women’s behaviour in their struggle to achieve equality for women. It was important back then to dismiss women’s biology as the only determining factor of her life.

Today, we don’t have to take the view that women’s biology, including their hormone profiles, are unimportant. We can reclaim biology and integrate it with the psychological plus social contexts to see that PMS does exist and does cause real suffering for many women.

Second, a vast body of neuroscience work is being ignored by the media – in favour of these studies which proclaim that PMS is all in women’s heads.

The evidence (from many studies) about the integration of hormones with mental processes is now well established.

Recent brain research has demonstrated the powerful influence that hormones such as estrogen, progesterone and testosterone have on brain chemistry, which underpins emotion, mood and behaviour.

Some women suffer from physical and mental disorders that become worse cyclically – migraines and epilepsy are well-accepted examples.

Every disorder has a biological, psychological and social context. It is just that with many physical illnesses, there’s the capacity to actually see the tissue damage, or measure markers of the illness, while mental disorders are difficult to measure or visualise in the same way.

This leaves debates about the existence of certain conditions, such as PMS, open to ideologically-motivated opinions rather than evidence-based realities.

In addition to a lack of neuroscientific understanding, the current PMS debate is defined by a lack of consideration for social context.

The argument that PMS is a “Western” woman’s disorder fails to take into account that mental health disorders are not given a priority in some cultures where there are many other battles to contend with.

The recent spate of stories about the difficulties in reporting rape in India is testimony to the level of gender inequality in certain parts of the world.

So it’s not surprising that non-life-threatening conditions, such as PMS, are given little consideration in some non-Western countries.

Rejecting the existence of PMS leads to increased hardship for women. Added to her burden of distressing symptoms is the frustration and pain of invalidation, and pejorative comments of disbelief about her cyclical mood or other symptoms. Women with severe PMS want and deserve validation and understanding of their condition.

One argument put up by those wishing to deny the existence of PMS is that medicalising PMS leads to harm and stigma.

This erroneous belief is based on the supposition that medicalisation means that (male) doctors will force harmful, ineffective treatments upon passive, uninformed, powerless women.

But good PMS management involves comprehensive collaboration between the woman and her doctor, and an integrated treatment approach.

Happily, we are approaching an era of individualised medicine, where each person’s biological, psychological and social context can be taken into consideration.

With rapidly accumulating scientific knowledge about the role of hormones in the brain and on behaviour, we are in a better place to listen to and discuss their concerns and issues with women, while taking the role of cyclical hormone changes into account.

So let’s leave the tired old debates of the 1970s in the past and aim for better integration of biology with psychology and the social context. Because that’s where real help and hope lies for many women.

Jayashri Kulkarni is the Director of the Monash Alfred Psychiatry research centre and receives research funding from the NHMRC, ARC, The Stanley Medical Research Institute, Washington,Jansen Cilag, Astra Zeneca,Roche.

The original version of this article was originally published at The Conversation and has been republished with full permission. Click to read the original article.

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Top Comments

Jacqui 11 years ago

It's definitely a real thing. My twin sister gets it SO much worse than me - she is a wreck. I basically avoid her for a few days. My best friend's boyfriend has said for about two years that we're a bunch of sooks and we should learn to control our emotions... Makes me wanna punch him ESPECIALLY when I'm in that stage.
Glad there's a lot of comments here that support it, except I think there will always be women who don't agree with it because it is hard to explain when you don't feel it.


Jac 11 years ago

Isn't PMS payback for all the times you've been tolerant when you shouldn't have been?
I say that jokingly but on a more serious note I don't believe I have to apologise for being a woman and experiencing a change in my hormones. It's not abnormal, it happens to most of us every month!
Men also have their own hormones that cause them to act in ways most women would never consider. Lets accept that we're different to men and lets not turn on each other because some people feel PMS more than others.
I think women debating whether or not PMS is or is not acceptable is taking us quite a few years back in our evolution.
I think there are two issues here:
1. You suffer from PMS and its a monthly struggle and you understand that many women around you are also struggling.
or
2. You don't really suffer it to the same extreme and therefore you assume that the rest of us are just out of control.
Sorry to be blunt but I think this one is black or white rather than grey.

guest 9 years ago

No you shouldn't apologize for experiencing a change in your hormones, but you should apologize if you deliberately use it as an excuse to treat others poorly while you're going through it. Yes PMS is a real thing, and a small percentage have an extreme reaction, but the vast majority would have some issues but nothing too off the rails. As a woman myself, I do think it's very easy to unleash the bitch when frustration levels are a little higher during the month and then just go "oh well I had PMS". That's not cool.