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Australia

‘Frustrating’ chronic condition impacting Aussie women

26 September 2025 03:30 | News

Australian women are twice the likelihood of men to live, patients and researchers say that investment is necessary to find treatments that will help to close the important health blind point.

According to the 2025 National Women’s Health Survey published in August, one of all three Australian women live with migraine.

The chronic situation is more than “headache çok, but it is a complex neurological event.

Justine Martin is a flexibility coach and writer who fights hemiplegic migraine for most of his life.

The 54-year-old child says he never leaves the house without painkillers or nausea anti-drugs.

“I’ve been living migraine since I was 15 and it’s not easier after 40 years,” AAP said.

“This is annoying because when you have migraine, people cannot see what is happening in your mind.”

Although he doesn’t want to let the situation control his life, Mrs Martin usually feels like he is playing a roulette game because he never knows when or where to hit a migraine.

“As I got older, I noticed different things that triggered them, but really trial and error eliminated different foods and understood these triggers.”

Women are at least twice the probability of men to live migraine, Research for Women’s Health by Jean Hailes to create.

“When women build their careers, families and future, they hit the hardest in their thirties, Jean Hailes Sarah White for women’s health.

“The cost of the days lost to pain is tremendous for individual women with wider consequences on society.”

For Olivia, who preferred not to give her surname, Migraine began at the age of 10 and often caused a sudden loss of its peripheral vision.

“He was very destructive in high school and I had to make my family take me many times,” he said.

Although there is no severe migraine in a few years, permanent headaches still affect their daily life because they are in their 30s.

“Often with headaches, water and medicines, something you should always prepare,” he said.

“Working in an institutional environment can be quite destructive and often I try to force it.”

According to the 2025 World Economic Forum Analysis Report, the handling of migraine would not only improve the lives of millions of women, but would also increase the global economy $ 80 billion (A121 billion dollars).

Migraine and headache Australian spokesman Carl Cincinnato, more investment and national attention is necessary, he said.

Iz We have to do more for one of all three women affected by this disorder, which can be weakening for many people, ”he said.


Australian Associated Press is a beating heart of Australian news. AAP has been the only independent national Newswire of Australia and has been providing reliable and fast news content to the media industry, the government and the corporate sector for 85 years. We inform Australia.

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