Diana Wallis said:
"Mr President, there is a great deal in this
report, I hope not too much, but I want to thank
the rapporteur for including a particular women's
health issue with which I have been much involved.
I refer to a disease which affects an estimated
14 million women and girls across the EU. There
is no known cure, the cause is unknown and the average
diagnosis time is rising, not falling, now standing
at nine years. The disease I am talking about is
endometriosis. It wrecks lives, it wrecks families,
it causes infertility, it is not just 'bad period
pains'. The disease desperately needs serious research
and attention.
As Members will be aware, we had
a written declaration in this House to raise awareness.
We achieved a total of 266 signatures, more than
has ever been achieved on a single health issue.
Seemingly, though, the pain caused by this disease
goes unnoticed. It is a real gender issue. Even
in our modern society, no one wants to talk about
the pain associated with menstruation; women should
'just get on with it'.
That cannot be right. The consequences
of this disease are heart-rending for many women
and families and there are also consequences for
Europe's economy. 14 million women across the EU
are waiting for someone to take their suffering
seriously. It is wonderful that the rapporteur has
included it.
I was grateful that the
Commissioner mentioned it, but really it is now
up to the Commission and the Member States to do
something about this dreadful disease, which is
a gender issue affecting only women and girls. I
wonder what might have been the case had it been
a male disease!"