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Case Report

Endometrial cancer in a young nulliparous woman: a case report
Herfiana Mohd Rapi, Azlina Ishak, Juliawati Muhammad, Engku Ismail Engku-Husna
Received June 13, 2025  Accepted August 24, 2025  Published online December 26, 2025  
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.25.0163    [Epub ahead of print]
Prolonged or irregular menstrual bleeding is common in women, particularly in the early years after menarche. Over time, menstrual cycles often become regular; however, persistently irregular menstruation warrants further investigation. Serious conditions, such as endometrial cancer, which is often linked to prolonged unopposed estrogen exposure, can be prevented with timely detection. We report a case involving a 27-year-old obese, nulliparous woman with a history of prolonged irregular menstrual bleeding since menarche. She had not undergone regular health checkups and had never been properly evaluated until multiple admissions for severe anemia prompted further investigation, which confirmed the diagnosis of endometrial carcinoma. Delays in seeking care for abnormal menstrual bleeding resulted in serious outcomes. Endometrial carcinoma may significantly reduce future fertility potential. Therefore, primary healthcare providers play a pivotal role in educating and raising public awareness about this frequently under-recognized issue, as timely investigation for early recognition is paramount.
  • 814 View
  • 21 Download

Original Article

Acquaintance and acceptance of menstrual cups among women of reproductive age: a hospital-based cross-sectional study from North India
Priya Bindal, Lajya Devi Goyal, Priyanka Garg
Korean J Fam Med 2025;46(6):435-442.   Published online January 3, 2025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.24.0083
Background
Menstrual hygiene is crucial to a woman’s physical, social, and mental well-being. The menstrual cup offers a safe and effective solution but still requires wider adoption. This study aims to assess awareness, practices, and barriers regarding the use of menstrual cups among women of reproductive age.
Methods
A cross-sectional study was conducted among 246 participants, randomly selected from outpatient settings of a tertiary care hospital in 2022. Non-pregnant menstruating women were included, while those with pelvic infections or cognitive impairments were excluded. After explaining the study’s purpose and ensuring anonymity, data were collected using a structured questionnaire adapted from previous studies conducted in India and abroad. Knowledge and practices were depicted using descriptive statistics, while factors affecting awareness were analyzed using a multivariable binary logistic regression analysis approach.
Results
Approximately 64.2% of participants were aware of menstrual cups, but only three were users. Participants living in urban areas, practicing Hinduism, and marrying after the age of 20 years showed higher awareness. Users rated the cup as comfortable, with no skin irritation, foul odor, or dryness. The primary barrier to use was insufficient knowledge.
Conclusion
There is a gap in awareness and usage of menstrual cups, especially in low- and middle-income countries like India. Preliminary feedback from users is encouraging, suggesting that menstrual cups could offer a cost-effective, eco-friendly, and sustainable way to improve menstrual hygiene.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Prevalence of menstrual cup usage among reproductive-age women in asian countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
    Surama Manjari Behera, Priyamadhaba Behera, Deb Kumar Pal, Vikas Yadav, Anjusha Ranjith, Venkatarao Epari, Binod Kumar Patro, Susmita Dora, Srikanta Kanungo, Jyotiranjan sahoo, Meena Som
    BMC Women's Health.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • A year of significant progress for the Korean Journal of Family Medicine
    Seung-Won Oh
    Korean Journal of Family Medicine.2026; 47(1): 1.     CrossRef
  • “I’d Be Scared of Getting it Stuck”: Understanding Perceptions of Menstrual Cups Among U.S. Menstruators
    Stephanie J. Gillis, Tahleen A. Lattimer
    Health Communication.2026; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Acceptability, Continuation, and User Experience of Menstrual Cup Usage Among Married Women: A Prospective Observational Study
    T Naga Sai Keerthi, Shobha Shiragur, S R Bidri, Shreedevi Kori, Preeti Malapure, Santosh Arakeri
    Cureus.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Awareness and Usage of Menstrual Cup Among Female Undergraduate Students of AIIMS Bhubaneswar and their Attitude Toward it: A Cross-Sectional Study
    Apratim Dev, Kumbha Gopi, Payel Roy, Manish Taywade, Sonu Hangma Subba
    The Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology of India.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • 5,888 View
  • 128 Download
  • 4 Web of Science
  • 5 Crossref

Review Article

Period Poverty: A Neglected Public Health Issue
Hafiz Jaafar, Suraya Yasmin Ismail, Amirah Azzeri
Korean J Fam Med 2023;44(4):183-188.   Published online May 16, 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.22.0206
Period poverty is a global community health dilemma that has long been overlooked. This condition is described as having insufficient access to menstrual products, education, and sanitation facilities. Briefly, period poverty means that millions of women are subjected to injustice and inequity due to menstruation. This review aimed to explore the definition, challenges, and effects of period poverty on the community, especially among women at their productive ages. In addition, suggestions to minimize the impact of period poverty are discussed. A search strategy was applied using the keywords “period poverty,” “period equity,” “period poverty,” and “menstrual hygiene” in Google Scholar, ScienceDirect, SpringerLink, MEDLINE, and PubMed electronic databases, journals, and articles on relevant topics. Trained researchers conducted a keyword search from January 2021 to June 2022. Based on the reviewed studies, it has been proven that many countries are still affected by the period stigma and taboo, inadequate exposure to menstrual health and its management, lack of education about menstruation, and shortage of access to menstrual products and facilities. The next step is to reduce and slowly eliminate the period poverty issue by conducting more research to increase clinical evidence and future references. This narrative review could inform policymakers of the magnitude of the burden related to this issue and guide them to develop effective strategies to minimize the impact of poverty, especially during the challenging years of the post-coronavirus disease 2019 era.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • ‘Why are Menstruating Women in India Removing their Wombs?’ Neoliberalism and Reproductive Justice: Unveiling the ‘Womb Divide’
    Shahida Shahida
    Asian Bioethics Review.2026; 18(1): 93.     CrossRef
  • Impactos da pobreza menstrual nas atividades diárias e orçamento de mulheres de um município da região centro-oeste paranaense
    Cheila Cristina Magrin, Esther Boiko de Andrade, Carolina Arnaut dos Santos, Eliane dos Santos, Maria da Conceição Ribeiro Simões, Anai Adario Hungaro
    Femina.2026; 53(10): 1219.     CrossRef
  • “I’d Be Scared of Getting it Stuck”: Understanding Perceptions of Menstrual Cups Among U.S. Menstruators
    Stephanie J. Gillis, Tahleen A. Lattimer
    Health Communication.2026; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Frontlines burning: Women’s lives at the heart of climate injustice
    Shubha Nagesh, Monalisha Sahu, Julia Robinson
    PLOS Global Public Health.2026; 6(2): e0005801.     CrossRef
  • Acceptability, Continuation, and User Experience of Menstrual Cup Usage Among Married Women: A Prospective Observational Study
    T Naga Sai Keerthi, Shobha Shiragur, S R Bidri, Shreedevi Kori, Preeti Malapure, Santosh Arakeri
    Cureus.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Association of food insecurity with depression severity, period poverty, and access to healthcare among college-aged women in South Florida
    Lea Sacca, Maria Mejia, Ayden Dunn, Christine Kamm, Morgan Decker, Kendell Lewis, Alana Starr, Alexandra Campson, Kayla Ernst, Gabriella Dasilva
    Nutritional Psychiatry.2026; 2: 100012.     CrossRef
  • Measuring menstrual hygiene in high-income countries: A scoping review
    Mintesnot Tenkir Teni, Jamirah Abdul-Haqq, Edvanio Fernandes, Anne Sebert Kuhlmann
    Women's Health.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Economic insecurity, access to menstrual materials, and sexual coercion: a qualitative study among adolescent schoolgirls in Ibadan, Nigeria
    Elizabeth L. Frost, Elizabeth Reed, Shira Goldenberg, Angela R. Bazzi, Olufunmilayo I. Fawole, Mobolaji M. Salawu, Omowumi O. Okedare, Georgia L. Kayser
    Reproductive Health.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Period poverty and genital hygiene behaviors of refugee adolescents in Türkiye: a high school example
    İlknur Göl, Derya Kaya Şenol, Serap Açıkgöz, Ayse Ozge Deniz
    Women & Health.2026; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Exploring menstrual poverty and its impact on adolescent mental health
    Ahmet Eren Tatar, Melis Pehlivantürk Kızılkan, Şeyma Erdem Torun, Yasemin Tulun, Aysel Hacısoy, Lala Jalilova, Zekiye Küpçü, Özlem Necipoğlu Banak, Yaşar Durmaz, Emine Demet Öztürk, Ayşe Bilge Baklacı, Ferda Evin, Yelda Kılıç, Sinem Akgül, Megan Lim
    Sexual Health.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Menstrual stigma and mental health for adolescent girls in South Sudan: A cross-sectional analysis
    Ashley Smith, Alexandra Blackwell, Eleonora Mansi, Thomas Hussein, Ambaku Peter Lomena, Cosmas Ayella, Anywar Sam Okot, Kathryn Falb, Lina Taing
    PLOS Global Public Health.2026; 6(5): e0004916.     CrossRef
  • Period Poverty: How School Nurses Can Support Menstrual Health and Hygiene
    Damaris Pereda, Sasha Mahuna
    NASN School Nurse.2025; 40(1): 38.     CrossRef
  • Period poverty and mental health among students attending a US university
    Jonathan Noel, Samantha Strong, Sarah Miller, Kelsey Gately, Samantha Rosenthal
    Journal of American College Health.2025; 73(10): 3813.     CrossRef
  • The economic impact of Long-Acting Contraceptives (LARCs) on public health
    Ana Claudia Marcelino, Paula da Cunha Pereira, Luis Bahamondes
    Clinics.2025; 80: 100598.     CrossRef
  • Cycles of Neglect: A Statutory Review of State Policies Regarding Feminine Hygiene Product Provision During Incarceration
    McKenzie Wood, Nicole E. Garrett, Douglas Routh, Michelle Jeffs
    International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology.2025; 69(12): 1741.     CrossRef
  • A Pilot Study of Menstrual Health Education, Attitudes, and Product Access in Rural Honduras
    Eleanor Stubley, Janice M. Marshall
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2025; 22(3): 374.     CrossRef
  • Menstrual hygiene management among girls and women refugees in Africa: a scoping review
    Alexis Harerimana, Gugu Mchunu, Julian David Pillay
    Conflict and Health.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Menstrual pain and epistemic injustice
    Adriana Joanna Mickiewicz
    Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy.2025; 28(3): 401.     CrossRef
  • Period Poverty and Barriers to Menstrual Health Equity in U.S. Menstruating College Students: A Scoping Review
    Lea Sacca, Diana Lobaina, Sara Burgoa, Vama Jhumkhawala, Meera Rao, Goodness Okwaraji, Yasmine Zerrouki, Joshua Sohmer, Michelle Knecht, Maria C. Mejia, Panagiota Kitsantas
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2025; 22(4): 619.     CrossRef
  • Integrating demographic insights into menstrual product choices: a study through the lens of Engel–Kollat–Blackwell Model
    Anushka Mehar, Yamini
    Health Education.2025; 125(4): 409.     CrossRef
  • Women's reproductive mental health: currently available evidence and future directions for research, clinical practice and health policy
    Louise M. Howard, Claire A. Wilson, Thomas J. Reilly, Katrina M. Moss, Gita D. Mishra, Ella Coupland‐Smith, Anita Riecher‐Rössler, Soraya Seedat, Shubulade Smith, Julia R. Steinberg, Jenneke van Ditzhuijzen, Sian Oram
    World Psychiatry.2025; 24(2): 196.     CrossRef
  • Period poverty in the United States of America: a socio-economic policy analysis
    Binda Godlove Aka
    Journal of Global Health Economics and Policy.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The Relationship Between Menstrual Poverty and Depressive Symptoms in Women Aged 15-49 in Balçova District of İzmir
    Tuba Polat, Zeynep Varol, Hatice Şimşek
    Journal of Basic and Clinical Health Sciences.2025; 9(2): 352.     CrossRef
  • Validation of the adolescent menstrual poverty questionnaire
    Mary Lukindo, Hannah Cameron, Victoria Price, Mandy Bouchard, Meghan Pike
    Paediatrics & Child Health.2025; 30(5): 402.     CrossRef
  • The necessity of enhancing menstrual health policy in Iran: A letter to editor
    Maryam Gharacheh, Fahimeh Ranjbar
    International Journal of Reproductive BioMedicine (IJRM).2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Socioeconomic inequalities and its spatial pattern in sanitary napkin use in Bangladesh: evidence from the 2019 multiple indicator cluster survey
    Emran Hasan, Salit Chakma, Moriam Khanam, Mohammad Hajizadeh
    Population Health Metrics.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • An Exploration into the Menstrual Health of Ecuadorian University Students: A Mixed-Methods Study
    Lisa Irene Jones, Alexander Simbaña, Daniela Annalie Lozada Velasteguí, Anahí Sthefanía Pérez Sánchez, Neil Harris, Nicola Wiseman, Gabriela Bustamante
    Women's Reproductive Health.2025; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Trends in the estimated proportion of outpatients with menstrual disorders and the number of prescribed low-dose estrogen/progestin drugs in Japan: A descriptive study
    Motoyuki Nakao, Kotaro Kuwaki, Keiko Yamauchi, Kyoko Nomura, Shinichi Tanihara, Marcio Alexandre H. Rodrigues
    PLOS One.2025; 20(7): e0327774.     CrossRef
  • Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices of Men and Women Regarding Infertility in the City of Tshwane, Pretoria, South Africa
    Vangile Naney Mabitsela, Andries Masenge, Maurine Rofhiwa Musie, Nombulelo Veronica Sepeng
    The Open Public Health Journal.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Period Poverty and the Quality of Life in the United States, India, and Pakistan
    S. Shahid, D. F. Sacco, S. Shahid, H. J. Rana, R. Bishop, E. V. Stepanova
    Women's Reproductive Health.2025; 12(4): 1066.     CrossRef
  • Period Poverty in Brazil: A Public Health Emergency
    Maurício Fonseca Ribeiro Carvalho de Moraes, Rui Nunes, Ivone Duarte
    Healthcare.2025; 13(16): 1944.     CrossRef
  • Bleeding inequality: How menstrual poverty undermines academic success via social anxiety in female university students—A structural equation modeling study
    Süleyman Utku Uzun, Merve Akin
    Health Care for Women International.2025; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Exploring the Diverse Menstrual Product Options and Raising Awareness about the Menstrual Cup: An Observational Study
    Anitha Gabbalkaje Shiva, Tejeswini Kolige Krishnappa, Sukanya Suresh, Savitha Chandraiah, Tejaswini Devaraj, Dhanyashree DV, Shreya Patil, Syeda Aliya Fatima, Suma Kadalagere Singegowda
    Journal of South Asian Federation of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.2025; 17(4): 511.     CrossRef
  • Period poverty in the United States of America: a socio-economic policy analysis
    Binda Godlove Aka
    Journal of Global Health Economics and Policy.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • “Menstrual hygiene perceptions and need for free sanitary products: a cross-sectional study in a UAE university setting”
    Tehniyat Hammad, Maryam Alsaffar, Nusrat Taosin Ashin, Khadijah Rashid, Aaqila Gangat, Jayadevan Sreedharan
    BMC Public Health.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Prevalence and determinants of menstrual abnormalities among postgraduate students using structural equation model
    K. Varsha, Satyanarayana, R. Prajna
    Journal of Education and Health Promotion.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • From period poverty to policy change: advancing menstrual health as a public health priority in Nigeria
    Francisca Ogochukwu Onukansi
    Frontiers in Reproductive Health.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Do Women Have Bodies with Problems? Menstrual Health, Period Poverty, and the Deprivation of Dignity
    Courage Mlambo
    Women.2025; 5(4): 39.     CrossRef
  • Dialogue for Dignity: How Communication Shapes Menstrual Health Outcomes in Tanzania
    Emily J. Pfender, Amy Bleakley, Jacob L. Bowman, Caroline Blowes
    Women's Reproductive Health.2025; : 1.     CrossRef
  • Menstrual health among young adults in Latin America and the Caribbean: A scoping review and evidence-gap map
    Lisa Irene Jones, Michelle A. Krahe, Nicola Rahman, Neil Harris, Nicola Wiseman, Gabriela Bustamante
    Women's Health.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Heavy menstrual bleeding and association with menstruation-specific resources: A multinational cross-sectional study in low- and middle-income countries
    Zarmeen Shakil, Bethany A. Caruso, Madeleine Patrick, Thea L. Mink, Tanushree Bhan, Tanvir Ahmed, Jenala Chipungu, Malini Reddy, Chibwe Beatrice Chiwala, Sheela S. Sinharoy
    Health & Place.2025; 96: 103576.     CrossRef
  • Exploring Adolescents' Menstrual Hygiene Management Needs: Findings From Students in St. Louis, Missouri Charter Schools
    Anne Sebert Kuhlmann, Kenneth Kibii, Kirstin Palovick, Cheleia Marshall
    Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health.2025; 57(4): 470.     CrossRef
  • Translation, cross-cultural adaptation and validity study of the Menstrual Practice Needs Scale (MPNS-36)
    Maria Eduarda Pascoaloto da Silva, Evelly Vitória Azevedo de Souza, Bianca Dargam Gomes Vieira, Mariana Lourenço Haddad, Ana Paula de Assis Sales, Sonia Silva Marcon, Catchia Hermes-Uliana, Mara Cristina Ribeiro Furlan
    Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Intersections of menstruation, gender-based violence and contraceptive use: qualitative insights from girls and young women’s experiences in western Kenyan family planning clinics
    Erin A Hartman, Cicely Marston, Jane Namwebya, Eunice Asala, Wilkister Ombidi, Florence Thungu, George Odwe, Manuela Colombini, Neha S Singh, Ana Maria Buller
    BMJ Open.2025; 15(12): e101248.     CrossRef
  • Tradução, adaptação transcultural e estudo de validação da Menstrual Practice Needs Scale (MPNS-36)
    Maria Eduarda Pascoaloto da Silva, Evelly Vitória Azevedo de Souza, Bianca Dargam Gomes Vieira, Mariana Lourenço Haddad, Ana Paula de Assis Sales, Sonia Silva Marcon, Catchia Hermes-Uliana, Mara Cristina Ribeiro Furlan
    Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Period Poverty Among Black, Hispanic and Low-Income Communities in the United States: Challenges and Recommendations
    Anuli Njoku, Mousa Al-Hassan, Sharaban Tohura, Kayla Garcia
    Hygiene.2025; 5(4): 58.     CrossRef
  • Menstrual health: an analysis of experiences among school-aged adolescents
    Jennifer Caroline de Oliveira Adomaitis, Natália Sevilha Stofel, Maria Gabriele Formis Silva, Vivian Campos Santos, Flávio Adriano Borges, Diene Monique Carlos, Bruna Luana de Souza Farias, Márcia Niituma Ogata, Juliana Cristina dos Santos Monteiro
    Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Salud menstrual: análisis de las experiencias de adolescentes en edad escolar
    Jennifer Caroline de Oliveira Adomaitis, Natália Sevilha Stofel, Maria Gabriele Formis Silva, Vivian Campos Santos, Flávio Adriano Borges, Diene Monique Carlos, Bruna Luana de Souza Farias, Márcia Niituma Ogata, Juliana Cristina dos Santos Monteiro
    Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Saúde menstrual: uma análise de experiências entre adolescentes escolares
    Jennifer Caroline de Oliveira Adomaitis, Natália Sevilha Stofel, Maria Gabriele Formis Silva, Vivian Campos Santos, Flávio Adriano Borges, Diene Monique Carlos, Bruna Luana de Souza Farias, Márcia Niituma Ogata, Juliana Cristina dos Santos Monteiro
    Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Bibliometric convergence in menstrual health & hygiene research: A deconstruction of evolving scientific narratives and emerging paradigms
    Shivalika Sharma, Jyoti Sharma
    Women & Health.2025; 65(10): 883.     CrossRef
  • Menstrual Products: Attitudes About Taxation and Safety
    Trupti Dhumal, Pragya Rai, Drishti Shah, Pamela W. Murray, Kimberly M. Kelly
    Journal of Women's Health.2024; 33(4): 491.     CrossRef
  • “For men, by men”: Menstrual victimization and the weaponization of period products in carceral settings
    Kathryn Tapp, Abigail Henson
    Women's Health.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Tranexamic acid for management of heavy vaginal bleeding: barriers to access and myths surrounding its use
    Heather VanderMeulen, Grace H. Tang, Michelle Sholzberg
    Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis.2024; 8(3): 102389.     CrossRef
  • “Ritual Purity” Reimagined: Eco-Friendly Menstrual Practices and Emotional Well-being in Muslim Women
    Shahida
    Women's Reproductive Health.2024; 11(4): 767.     CrossRef
  • Management of abnormal uterine bleeding on anticoagulation: the patient–clinician perspective
    Bethany T. Samuelson Bannow
    Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis.2024; 22(7): 1819.     CrossRef
  • A pilot survey of students’ menstrual attitudes, experiences, and needs on an urban university campus
    Abigail Suleman, Shruthi Krishna, Divya Krishnakumar, Kai Nemoto, My Lê Thảo Nguyễn, Supriya D Mehta
    Women's Health.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Period poverty, reuse needs, and depressive symptoms among refugee menstruators in Jordan’s camps: a cross-sectional study
    Nadia Muhaidat, Joud Al Karmi, Abdulrahman M. Karam, Farah Abushaikha, Mohammad Ali Alshrouf
    BMC Women's Health.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Menstrual poverty scale: reliability and validity study
    Özge Öz Yildirim, Ayla Hendekci, Ilknur Aydın Avci
    Women & Health.2024; 64(6): 526.     CrossRef
  • Syndemics in women’s health: poverty, social exclusion, and clustering of thrombotic and hemostasis disorders
    Ellen O’Rourke, Sarah Kelliher, Barry Kevane
    Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis.2024; 8(5): 102481.     CrossRef
  • Forbidden Conversations: A Comprehensive Exploration of Taboos in Sexual and Reproductive Health
    Nor Faiza Mohd. Tohit, Mainul Haque
    Cureus.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Perspectives on prior preparation for menstrual experience from women and female health workers in Malawi
    Gertrude Mwalabu, Safari Mbewe, Annie Namathanga, Rodney Masese, Charity Kabondo, Leah Katuya, Pammla Petrucka, Patrick Mapulanga
    Women's Health.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Behavior and attitudes of female medical students regarding menstrual products
    Teodora Marković, Vuk Marušić, Aleksandra Nikolić, Isidora Vujčić, Milan Bjekić, Sandra Šipetić-Grujičić
    Zdravstvena zastita.2024; 53(3): 32.     CrossRef
  • Period poverty is a continuing global challenge
    Lucy Khofi
    Nature Human Behaviour.2024; 8(11): 2070.     CrossRef
  • Addressing the commercial determinants of menstrual health: a call to regulate menstrual product manufacturers
    Céline Brassart Olsen
    Health Promotion International.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Menstrual Hygiene Management and Reproductive Morbidity among Women Tea Plantation Workers in Wayanad District, Kerala, India
    Puthupparambil S. Alifia, Paul T. Francis, Malathi Mini, Jeby J. Olickal, Kavumpurathu R. Thankappan
    Medical Journal of Dr. D.Y. Patil Vidyapeeth.2024; 17(Suppl 1): S178.     CrossRef
  • Ubóstwo menstruacyjne w świetle badań i opracowań naukowych z lat 2013–2023
    Agata Buczak
    Nierówności Społeczne a Wzrost Gospodarczy.2024; (80): 105.     CrossRef
  • 25,858 View
  • 629 Download
  • 54 Web of Science
  • 66 Crossref
Original Article
Association of Premenstrual Syndrome with Quality of Life in Young Korean Women.
Bo Mi Kim, Ji In Jung, Yun Mi Song, Jung Kwon Lee, Jun Hyun Yoo
J Korean Acad Fam Med 2008;29(2):108-113.   Published online February 10, 2008
Background
Menstruation is often regarded as a privilege for women allowing reproductive activity. However, abrupt hormonal fluctuations in menstrual cycle may cause distressing physical and psychological symptoms such as premenstrual syndrome (PMS). PMS is known to have a great impact on daily life activities and social functions, and might result in significantly decreased quality of life (QOL). In this study, we aimed to evaluate a relation between PMS and QOL in young adult Korean women. Methods: Self-administered questionnaires were distributed to a total of 514 women who were aged 16∼35 years and who were employed in an industrial complex located in Gyeonggi-do, Korea. PMS was assessed using diagnostic criteria recommended by the American Psychiatric Association. QOL was assessed using Korean health related Quality of Life Scale. The association between PMS and QOL was examined in 440 women using the two-sample t-test after excluding 74 women who were missing for variables essential for the assessment of PMS and QOL. Results: The prevalence of PMS was 7.3% (32 out of 440 women). Women with PMS had the worse QOL score in almost all domains of QOL except for spiritual health (physical function, psychological health, social function, pain, vitality, role limitation, health status perception, and health status change). Conclusion: There was a significant relation between PMS and QOL. The finding of significantly lower QOL in women with PMS suggests that PMS should be evaluated and treated actively in primary care. (J Korean Acad Fam Med 2008;29:108-113)
  • 2,004 View
  • 50 Download
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