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North Tidewater News

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Sepsis and Toxic Shock Syndrome: Awareness Can Save Lives

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CHKD Health & Surgery Center (Newport News) issued the following announcement on Sept. 2

As a child of the ’80s, I grew up hearing about toxic shock syndrome (TSS), a rare but potentially deadly complication often associated with super absorbent tampons. When it was my time to choose, I still chose a tampon.

Over the years, we stopped hearing about TSS. Tampons continued to be the preferred choice by most women. They are praised for their convenience and the freedom they give. Most mothers have stopped talking to their daughters about toxic shock. It is widely considered a thing of the past. The few stories that do make the news are often the horror stories of women forgetting and leaving them inserted for days or weeks.

In 2015, I suffered from TSS and septic shock, following an intrauterine device removal and subsequent use of a tampon. I spent five days in a medically induced coma and was given less than a 5% chance of survival. I am one of the lucky ones and I feel that it is my responsibility to give a voice for those who were not.

TSS has happened in less than two hours of using regular absorbency tampons. Just ask Lisa Elifritz, who in 2010 lost her 21-year-old daughter, Amy. Amy Elifritz only used regular tampons and her family used to tease her about how often she would change them. In 2012, Lauren Wasser, an aspiring model, also suffered from TSS. She had been taught from age 13 to change her tampon every 3-4 hours and always changed it in the morning, afternoon, and evening. What she thought was a case of the flu turned into a medically induced coma with 1% chance to live. She survived but is now a double amputee and is known as the model with golden legs.

March 27, 2017, was Maddy Massabni’s 19th birthday. She died on the bathroom floor in her mother’s arms after feeling unwell that day and eventually having a heart attack. We had the honor of having her mother, Dawn, speak at the Begin Again Foundation gala in 2019. Dawn tearfully spoke of her heartbreak and regret that she was unaware of the dangers of conventional tampons and is currently campaigning the FDA to make the TSS warning big and bold on boxes.

A few months after Dawn spoke, I received a message from one of the guests at the gala. She told me that after hearing Maddy’s story she spoke to her own teenage daughter about toxic shock. Her daughter, a freshman in college, recognized the symptoms in her roommate and told her to go to the emergency department. She was diagnosed with toxic shock and was told she was extremely lucky to have caught it early.

It is the year 2021 and women do not and should not have to die from TSS. There are many safer alternatives such as pads, period panties, menstrual cups, and 100% organic tampons. That’s why the Begin Again Foundation has established our Period Planners program, to educate communities on TSS and provide women facing housing insecurity with safe feminine hygiene products.

As a former tampon user, I wish one thing more than anything else: I wish that I knew the symptoms so that I could have sought treatment sooner. It’s a simple as this: Awareness saves lives.

Original source can be found here.

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