'I'm not being listened to' - new health plan launched as women say they are still ignored
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'I'm not being listened to' - new health plan launched as women say they are still ignoredJust nowShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleHugh Pym,Health editorandCatherine Burns,Health correspondentBBCZoe Trafford had major surgery for endometriosis but still has lots of complications, which she feels aren't taken seriously enoughZoe Trafford often had to play the role of agony aunt to her customers. But the hairdresser in Liverpool told the BBC there came a point when the roles had to be reversed - the customers in her salon had to instead listen to her problems.Zoe has had endometriosis, which can cause severe pain and heavy bleeding, since she was a teenager. For years, doctors told her she just had bad periods. She first spoke to BBC News in 2022, when a women's health strategy for England was published by the Conservative government. "You'll be alright, it's just normal," she said doctors would tell her. "But it's not normal – I don't think being in pain is normal."The 2022 strategy promised to "radically improve" how the health and care system engaged with and listened to all women and girls, and to boost health outcomes.Four years on, that strategy for improving women's healthcare is being updated by a Labour government.For Zoe, life has changed dramatically since then - and not for the better. She has had major surgery - her womb and part of her bowel have been removed, and she now has to drain her own bladder using a small tube. She still feels she is not being heard. "I'm not being listened to. Basically, I've had the surgery but I'm having more and more complications," she says. Zoe has had to give up hairdressing because the pain of standing is too much to bear. Meanwhile, there's more endless waiting."I'm being passed from from urology to 'gynae' back to the GP, and it's just like I'm in a vicious circle, and no one see...



