Jobs & Education3 mins ago
12 year old daughter with heavy periods
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My 12 year old daughter started her periods about 9 months ago, but they are really heavy and painful. She has to change her sanitary towels every hour and can actually hear and feel the blood coming. She goes through numerous pairs of pants and leaks onto trousers/tights,she uses the extra heavy towels but it still dont make any difference. Just wondering if it would be worth taking her to see our gp to see if he can prescribe her something to make them less heavy or as shes not long started wait for a while to see if they settle down?
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I really feel for her as I had the same problem when mine started at about the same age. The first issue is, as PipinHull says, no matter how uncomfortable you feel about it, starting to use tampons would make a world of difference. My Mum really didn't want me too but when I finally did it reduced the uncomfortable 'nappy' feeling as well as made me less self-conscious (gymnastics with a jumbo towel anyone? no, thought not). At that age she'll need help with it though as I struggled to figure it out and make things 'comfortable' on my own.
My GP tried a couple of things that were meant to either reduce the blood flow or reduce the number of periods but none of them worked for me. Ultimately going on the pill at 14 was the solution, even though my parents were very uncomfortable about it. I wish the GP had gone straight to that and saved me a couple of years of hell! Even now it is the only thing that works for me - I'm on a brand that allows me to take three packets in a row so I only have a 'period' about once every 10-12 weeks.
My GP tried a couple of things that were meant to either reduce the blood flow or reduce the number of periods but none of them worked for me. Ultimately going on the pill at 14 was the solution, even though my parents were very uncomfortable about it. I wish the GP had gone straight to that and saved me a couple of years of hell! Even now it is the only thing that works for me - I'm on a brand that allows me to take three packets in a row so I only have a 'period' about once every 10-12 weeks.
As others have said take her to the GP. The pill is certainly an option and I used to get Ponstan too when I was younger and it really helped with the pain. The absolute dread of leaking onto school skirt was the worst though so any help with the heaviness I'd have thought she'd welcome.
I went through to a restaurant velvet seat once - I wanted to die.
I went through to a restaurant velvet seat once - I wanted to die.
jamxtart, I meant to send you this link & forgot to add it.Ron.
http://www.patient.co...8Dysmenorrhoea%29.htm
http://www.patient.co...8Dysmenorrhoea%29.htm
yes...basic tests to rule out anything else. at that age, it's hard enough just to deal with periods alone, without what you describe. also, i went through the same thing and mum/gp tried to force me into using tampons, but i just wasn't ready. let your daughter experiment/feel comfortable with how she remains secure. i became phobic and this had ramifications for tampon use/smears/sexual contact/body image etc.for a long time until i recently had therapy and other interventions (i'm now 35). i now regret those wasted years bitterly and wish that someone had been there for me like you are there for your daughter. you sound like a really supportive mum. good luck x