Women struggling get weight shamed. Why?

As a teenager, Pamela Everland suffered from irregular and excessively heavy periods that lasted for six to eight weeks. At 19-years-old, a gynecologist finally placed her on birth control to regulate her periods, but new symptoms arrived; Everland experienced rapid weight gain throughout her 20s despite committing to various diets, including Weight Watchers and the low-carb Atkins diet, and suffered from acne well into her 30s.

But at every doctor’s visit, she was just told to lose weight. 

“I told my primary care physician that I hate coming into the office because I feel like it’s weight-focused,” she says.

So, she stopped going to the doctor and suffered in silence.

Instead, Everland began conducting her own research and discovered that her symptoms aligned with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), an endocrine condition in which a woman’s ovaries and/or adrenal glands overproduce male sex hormones called androgen.

She pushed her primary care physician to test her hormones, which required going off birth control for three months to get an accurate reading. 

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