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The conversation about endometriosis and invisible illness has finally reached the arts | Kylie Maslen


Andi Snelling uses bold, exaggerated movement to illustrate her chronic ill health in Happy-Go-Wrong
Andi Snelling uses bold, exaggerated movement to illustrate her chronic ill health in Happy-Go-Wrong
Sun 14 Mar 2021 22.52 EDT
Last modified on Wed 17 Mar 2021 22.30 EDT
In 2015 a revolt sprung seemingly from nowhere as women began talking openly about chronic, invisible illnesses.
The Guardian Australia journalist Gabrielle Jackson shared her personal experience of endometriosis – the pain, the dismissal by doctors, the impacts on daily life – in a powerful opinion piece. That piece expanded into an international investigation by the Guardian on a condition that had previously received little attention either in the media or among the medical establishment.

Australia , Adelaide , South-australia , France , French , Australian , Libby-trainor-parker , Gabrielle-jackson , Leslie-jamison , Yasemin-sabuncu , Fiona-wright , Australian-institute-for-health