Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP cited one fact from the report, but out of context. She should have included the sentence next to it, too.
In a randomly selected group of premenopausal women, the most common amount of menstrual flow (measured in a laboratory from all collected tampons and pads) was about two tablespoons (30 ml) in a whole period (1;2). However the amount of flow was highly variable—it ranged from a spot to over two cups (540 ml) in one period!
Pre menopausal.
OPs daughter is a teen
Premenopausal means before menopause. That would include teens.
Per the article (because reading seems to be an issue here, although people love to cite stuff)
Refers to women from menarche until perimenopause. Before perimenopause was understood, this term described any menstruating woman.
No, "premenopausal" is the term used when you're in your 40s and your hormones are just starting to whack out as your body begins the descent into menopause.
Op's kid is a teen.
Are there men posting on this thread bc there are some really inaccurate responses that couldn't possibly be from a woman.
Anonymous wrote:i can't believe anyone would wear a pad in a public pool. that is disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP cited one fact from the report, but out of context. She should have included the sentence next to it, too.
In a randomly selected group of premenopausal women, the most common amount of menstrual flow (measured in a laboratory from all collected tampons and pads) was about two tablespoons (30 ml) in a whole period (1;2). However the amount of flow was highly variable—it ranged from a spot to over two cups (540 ml) in one period!
Pre menopausal.
OPs daughter is a teen
Premenopausal means before menopause. That would include teens.
Per the article (because reading seems to be an issue here, although people love to cite stuff)
Refers to women from menarche until perimenopause. Before perimenopause was understood, this term described any menstruating woman.
Anonymous wrote:OP here’s and I agree, as much as it sucks! She has her period a full seven days, about three of them on the heavier side. Aargh!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP cited one fact from the report, but out of context. She should have included the sentence next to it, too.
In a randomly selected group of premenopausal women, the most common amount of menstrual flow (measured in a laboratory from all collected tampons and pads) was about two tablespoons (30 ml) in a whole period (1;2). However the amount of flow was highly variable—it ranged from a spot to over two cups (540 ml) in one period!
Pre menopausal.
OPs daughter is a teen
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP cited one fact from the report, but out of context. She should have included the sentence next to it, too.
In a randomly selected group of premenopausal women, the most common amount of menstrual flow (measured in a laboratory from all collected tampons and pads) was about two tablespoons (30 ml) in a whole period (1;2). However the amount of flow was highly variable—it ranged from a spot to over two cups (540 ml) in one period!
Pre menopausal.
OPs daughter is a teen
Anonymous wrote:PP cited one fact from the report, but out of context. She should have included the sentence next to it, too.
In a randomly selected group of premenopausal women, the most common amount of menstrual flow (measured in a laboratory from all collected tampons and pads) was about two tablespoons (30 ml) in a whole period (1;2). However the amount of flow was highly variable—it ranged from a spot to over two cups (540 ml) in one period!
Anonymous wrote:PP cited one fact from the report, but out of context. She should have included the sentence next to it, too.
In a randomly selected group of premenopausal women, the most common amount of menstrual flow (measured in a laboratory from all collected tampons and pads) was about two tablespoons (30 ml) in a whole period (1;2). However the amount of flow was highly variable—it ranged from a spot to over two cups (540 ml) in one period!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Skip tampons and go straight for menstrual cups.
I’m in my 40s and have had two kids and I can’t get the hang of menstrual cups. I’ve tried 2 different brands for several months each and they were painful, messy and/or leaked terribly. Buy a variety of tampons until you find one she will use.
Those are disgusting.
The poor person who has to use the public restroom following the person who just emptied one of those without yet washing their hands. Unsanitary and gross.
You know it's possible to plan around the need to empty in a public restroom. IMO they're a lot less "disgusting" (to quote you) than pads and tampons in the landfills and sewer system.
PP, have you watched tutorials to understand the different ways you can fold the cup and sit/stand while inserting? Same for everyone teaching their DD about tampons. Have them envision that it's pointing toward their lower back diagonally as they insert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With the invention of Thinx and all that, I keep hoping someone will come up with a period panty for swimming, but...no.
That would be a swim diaper. Thinx is basically a washable diaper.
You realize swim diapers don’t absorb liquids, right? They are for poop only. So, no.