
Workplaces must wake up to the harmful invisibility of endometriosis
In a country grappling with gender equity, rising workplace absenteeism, and the push for inclusive labour policies under the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA), endometriosis remains an overlooked crisis, one that silently undermines South Africa's efforts to create humane, productive and equitable workplaces.
'You don't look sick,' is a phrase women with endometriosis hear way too often at work, at home, in doctors' offices and sometimes from themselves.
In conversations with others navigating endometriosis, a recurring theme emerges: the overwhelming burden of managing pain in silence, often while trying to meet workplace expectations. Many speak of being expected to justify absences long before receiving a diagnosis, as if their health problems were inconveniences rather than legitimate concerns.
These experiences show how invisible endometriosis remains in the workplace, not just in terms of physical pain, but also the stigma and lack of accommodations that quietly shape career trajectories. And behind that invisibility lies one of the most debilitating and misunderstood health crises affecting working women today.
Endometriosis is a condition where tissue similar to the uterine lining grows outside the uterus. It affects roughly one in 10 women globally. That's millions silently battling chronic pain, fatigue and infertility. In South Africa, where access to specialist care is uneven and healthcare resources are strained, many women face even longer delays in diagnosis and appropriate treatment.
Research shows that it takes seven to 10 years to get a diagnosis. During that time, many women are gaslit, misdiagnosed or dismissed. The consequence? Careers cut short, dignity eroded, jobs lost and health quietly sacrificed on the altar of workplace performance.
This structural mismatch between what employees need and what workplaces demand creates a dynamic where women feel pressured to mask their pain to avoid stigma, job loss or being labelled as unreliable. This is especially damaging in sectors where sick leave is tightly controlled, or in precarious work environments with little room for flexibility.
The unpredictable nature of endometriosis flare-ups makes consistent attendance and productivity difficult. Missed promotions, unfair performance reviews, or job losses are not
uncommon. This undermines employment equity, not only along gender lines but also class and health lines.
At many workplaces, 'diversity and inclusion' is reduced to a wellness day or a motivational speaker. But for employees doubled over in pain, that kind of tokenism is not support, it's avoidance. Chronic illness remains the elephant in the boardroom.
South Africa's progress toward workplace transformation, through broad-based black economic empowerment and equity laws is commendable. But to be truly inclusive, policies must also account for the experiences of those managing chronic, often invisible health conditions such as endometriosis. This gap signals the need for a more intersectional approach to workplace equity.
A framework for change
To end this cycle, here is a four-part framework South African workplace can adopt immediately
1.
Policy reform:
Recognise chronic illness in HR and organisational policies. Review BCEA provisions in relation to long-term, fluctuating conditions like endometriosis.
2.
Flexible work options:
Enable remote work, adjustable schedules, and rest breaks during flare-ups, especially important in South Africa's mixed rural-urban labour economy.
3.
Manager education:
Train supervisors to replace scepticism with empathy. Awareness reduces stigma and improves productivity.
4.
Support systems:
Create access to mental health resources, safe disclosure channels, and peer support groups. These are low-cost interventions that are effective.
I explore this framework in detail in my recent article which you can read
When flare-ups hit, routine tasks become mountains. Without proper support, women are forced to choose between health and income. For South Africa, where high unemployment, youth joblessness and gender inequality already intersect, this is an unacceptable trade-off.
Endometriosis is not just a medical condition, it's a workplace issue. One that demands recognition under policies and labour codes, and inclusion in discussions around productivity and well-being.
If we claim to care about transformation, dignity, and decent work, we must move beyond superficial gestures. It's time to stop brushing off pain that doesn't show on a scan and start building workplaces that are compassionate, inclusive, and prepared for reality.
Endometriosis is real. Women's pain is real. It's time our policies, leaders, and workplace cultures responded like it.
Zimkhitha Juqu is a researcher, published and cited author interested in gender, health equity and workplace inclusion.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Herald
a day ago
- The Herald
Motsoaledi demands answers on hospitals' deadly negligence
'Now what do we make of this? All doctors and nurses are trained in the same institutions in the country. How come those doctors acted that way?' He said poor leadership led to the tragedy. 'I can guess that they don't even have management meetings, even mortality meetings — because if they did, some of these things would've been picked up. 'I'm particularly disappointed about the RMSH because I was there when the hospital was opened. It was one of the best. In my speech I mentioned that for it to be one of the best, it needed the management to be on their toes all the time. It means that didn't happen. They had facilities that many other hospitals didn't have, so there is a failure of management.' The Northern Cape department of health welcomed the health ombudsman's investigation report and committed to improving patient care. 'The department recognises the critical importance of mental health services and the vulnerability of psychiatric patients,' spokesperson Lebogang Majaha said. 'We are dedicated to implementing necessary improvements to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.' TimesLIVE

The Herald
2 days ago
- The Herald
Calls for nurses' mental health and wellness to be taken seriously
Healthcare leaders have called for urgent systemic action to prioritise nurses' wellness, warning that the health of the country's largest workforce is being overlooked to the detriment of patient outcomes. Speaking at the 5th African Nursing Conference in Boksburg, Brig-Gen Azwihangwisi Makumbane, from the SA Military Health Service (SAMHS) said burnout, fatigue and lack of support have become silent threats within hospitals, clinics and military facilities. Makumbane has called on the government to urgently establish wellness clinics in all healthcare facilities, warning that without support systems for healthcare workers, their performance is compromised. 'We are supposed to have wellness clinics in every hospital by now. Healthcare professions are being taken as supermen and superwomen while they are also human beings and need the same support system,' Makumbane said. Makumbane said nurses, doctors, kitchen staff and security personnel all face extreme stress in the healthcare environment, yet there are few safe spaces for them to seek help. 'In the military, we have established a wellness clinic at 1 Military Hospital in Gauteng. It serves all our staff, not just nurses, but everyone from cleaners to clinicians. That model must be replicated across the country,' she said. She emphasised the importance of occupational health and safety units being properly staffed by trained medical professionals who can assess, refer and support staff with psychological or physical challenges. 'When nurses are emotionally exhausted, they lose compassion not because they do not care, but because they are drowning silently. Mental health is part of wellness, she said. TimesLIVE

The Herald
2 days ago
- The Herald
Nurses in private and public practice exchange notes at annual conference
For two consecutive years, the African Nursing Conference has provided a platform for public and private practitioners to learn more about each other. This is according to Dr Tracey de Klerk, chair of the Gauteng department of health, who was speaking at the two-day Fifth African Nursing Conference which started on Wednesday and will continue until Thursday at the Birchwood Hotel & OR Tambo Conference Centre in Boksburg. 'For the past two conferences, there were many requests for the public to know more about private, and private to know more about public, especially with the word NHI (National Health Insurance) and people not understanding that NHI is a fund and that we are looking at universal health coverage,' she said. Different speakers across the Sadc region and various provinces in the country tackled different topics about the nurses' profession and the challenges they have. De Klerk said the conference was more focused on universal health coverage. She said it was about showing people that public and private health nurses could work together — but first, they need to understand each other. 'Sometimes we need to ask a question, not just to get a response, but to get that understanding. Because when you understand, whether it's culture, e nvironment or even the health ecosystem, it touches your mind, it touches your heart to have a look at the magnitude of the public sector and why the public sector also needs that support,' she said. According to her, they are using the conference to look at the best practices, and both public and private practitioners were combining ideas on how best nurses can work together during the NHI implementation. 'What can we do collectively to move forward? Because, you know, there's a proverb that says, if you want to go fast, go alone. But if you want to go far, go together. 'We want to go far; we want the system to find a way to work. Yes, we know that there are issues, whether it is staffing, whether it is resources, but somewhere we have to begin,' she said.