Nova Scotia

Misunderstood and underdiagnosed, Canadian patients wait years for endometriosis care

Up to 10 per cent of people born with uteruses have endometriosis, but experts and researchers say it's often dismissed as bad period pain, and can take years to be treated properly.

The disease affects 10 per cent of people with uteruses, but remains underfunded, underresearched

A blond woman wearing tortoiseshell glasses and a black puffy coat stands outside the IWK Health building in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
After spending years trying to get a referral for specialized care, Maggie Archibald received excision surgery in February 2023, which she hopes will help ease what she says are 'agonizing' endometriosis symptoms. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

Maggie Archibald trudges down her street to the hospital, bleary-eyed from having not slept in anticipation of a surgery she hopes will change her life.

It's care she's fought for — spending years in and out of doctors' offices, even writing to elected officials asking for help when it seemed like she was getting nowhere.

Archibald, 28, is receiving surgery to treat her endometriosis. Medical staff will identify and remove cell growth around her uterus, with the goal of easing dagger-like abdominal pains that flare up during menstruation and ovulation.

"It's kind of hard to work, kind of hard to focus," she said. "It's having to accommodate working from home and not going out with friends and family."

It's a sunny day in late February. Archibald waited years for this surgery, but still considers herself lucky. She scored an operating date only after someone else cancelled theirs. 

Her mom met her at the front doors of the IWK Health Centre in Halifax. They embrace and she walks in, ready for her next chapter.

Underdiagnosed, often untreated

The Endometriosis Network Canada says that the disease affects up to 10 per cent of people born with uteruses. It occurs when cells similar to the lining of the uterus implant abnormally outside the uterus and form lesions, cysts and other growths.

While there are scientific gaps in the understanding of the disease — what causes it, how to cure it — patients say the symptoms can be debilitating. Even after treatment, it can grow back.

But finding effective treatment in Canada involves navigating a labyrinth of health-care professionals, according to author Tracey Lindeman.

WATCH | People can wait years for proper treatment, advocates say: 

Endometriosis goes underdiagnosed in Canada, advocates say

2 years ago
Duration 2:02
Endometriosis is a debilitating illness that affects roughly 10 per cent of women, but getting it diagnosed and treated in Canada can take years.

She described a two-pronged problem: not all medical professionals take pelvic pain seriously, dismissing it as "bad periods" — a baked-in, womanly pain — and prescribing birth control and painkillers. For those that do receive a referral for specialized care, wait times can exceed years. 

"Barriers exist all across Canada in different ways. But something that's really common across the country is impossibly long wait times," said Lindeman, author of Bleed: Destroying Myths and Misogyny in Endometriosis Care

She said some people go to family doctors or walk-in clinics "dozens" of times before anyone takes their concerns seriously. 

Accessing care can take so long that some patients travel to other countries, including the United States and Romania for treatment.

"What ends up happening is a lot of people with endometriosis end up feeling like huge failures in life," she said. "You can't do the basic things that everyone else seems able to do."

A woman with short hair wearing all black stands in front of a train track.
Tracey Lindeman, author of Bleed: Destroying Myths and Misogyny in Endometriosis Care, says accessing care is so difficult that some patients travel to countries like Romania and the United States for treatment. (Benjamin Cruz)

Finding specialized care can be a challenge

Archibald's care is provided by Halifax's endometriosis and chronic pelvic pain clinic, a clinic set up to mirror a similar model established in British Columbia. 

The clinic opened in September 2021 and serves all three Maritime provinces.

Gynecologist Elizabeth Randle said it was opened to fulfil an unmet need in the region. Despite the prevalence of the disease, it was the first clinic of its kind in Atlantic Canada.

But the wait to get into the clinic is 18 months, and even getting a referral can be challenging in provinces where thousands of people have no family doctor.

That's still an improvement. Before the clinic opened, the wait time for a pelvic pain referral in the Maritimes was more than two years.

Randle said patients requiring urgent care can sometimes jump the queue, but said it's not uncommon for people like Archibald to have to lobby aggressively to get care.

"People are realizing, even if their family doctor doesn't, that what they're experiencing isn't normal," she said. 

Experts like Randle and patients alike are calling for greater funding and research to learn more about the disease.

"It's as common as various forms of cancer, which we have [charitable] runs for, every year. There's just very little willingness to recognize how severe the impacts can be," said Lindeman.

Randle said she'd like to see services expanded in the Maritimes in addition to increased research and awareness.

"It definitely is an underresearched population," said Randle. "We don't know a lot about the disease and we need more funding to be able to really understand why it happens and how it happens."

A woman with long brown hair and square glasses looks at the camera frowning. She is outdoors, in front of a tree, and wearing a black puffy jacket.
Dr. Elizabeth Randle helped establish Halifax's endometriosis and pelvic pain clinic, and says the disease requires more research. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

After fighting for care, some relief 

Archibald's surgery was a success: endometriosis was removed from her uterus.

"I'm really pleased with how everything went," she said hours after the surgery.

Two weeks later, it's still too early to know if her symptoms are gone, but she reports feeling good, and less tired. 

She hopes the pain will now be part of the past, but says she's thankful for a medical team who took her seriously, paving the way for a future where she can thrive and live without the fear of painful flare-ups.  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kate McKenna is a senior reporter with CBC News. She is based in the parliamentary bureau. [email protected].

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