Emma Barnett
Why Mums Don't Jump
English - February 24, 2021 02:00 - 32 minutes - 28.3 MBMedicine Health & Fitness Society & Culture Personal Journals pelvic floor incontinence prolapse women’s health postnatal mums pelvic organ prolapse pelvic pain hypertonic pelvic floor menopause Homepage Download Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Helen is joined by the award-winning broadcaster and journalist Emma Barnett who says a hypertonic pelvic floor is one of the 'most upsetting’ things she’s ever been through. They talk about awareness, a need for research and how ‘women’s issues’ don’t always get the platform they deserve.
A hypertonic pelvic floor is where the muscles are so tight they can’t relax. It can happen after childbirth. It can be incredibly painful. And we can add it to a long list of things we’ve never heard of but probably should.
In this episode, Helen is joined by the award-winning broadcaster and journalist Emma Barnett who says a hypertonic pelvic floor is one of the ‘most upsetting’ things she’s ever been through. Emma’s not afraid to smash stigmas. She's literally written the book on periods and spoken openly about living with endometriosis. But a tight pelvic floor? She’d just never come across it.‘I would have loved to have heard this conversation when my son was around three months old and I was scrabbling about on the internet late at night thinking ‘Am I losing my mind here?’Helen and Emma talk about awareness, a need for research and how ‘women’s issues’ don’t always get the platform they deserve.
Emma presents Woman's Hour on BBC Radio 4 in the UK and is a regular on BBC 2's Newsnight
You can find Emma's book 'It's About Bloody Time. Period.' here
She's @emmabarnett on Instagram and @Emmabarnett on Twitter
For more information on hypertonic pelvic floor listen to:
Pelvic Floor Problems 101
Sarah's Story
Find Helen @whymumsdontjump on Instagram and Twitter or at www.whymumsdontjump.com
To find a pelvic health physiotherapist in the UK, Emma mentioned Mummy MOT or you could try the Squeezy Directory
For more information and support about Endometriosis, go to Endometriosis UK