The Guardian (USA)

Hundreds report abnormal menstruati­on after being teargassed during Portland protests

- Lois Beckett in Los Angeles

More than a thousand people reported lasting health effects after being exposed to teargas during protests in Portland, Oregon, last summer, according to a newly published scientific study.

Nearly 900 people reported abnormal menstrual cycles, including intense cramping and increased bleeding, that began or persisted days after their initial exposure to the teargas. Hundreds of others complained of other negative health impacts, including severe headaches, nausea, diarrhea, and mental health concerns.

The new research, based on an online survey of more than 2,200 people, challenges claims that the health consequenc­es of being teargassed are minor and temporary, said Dr Britta Torgrimson-Ojerio, a researcher at Kaiser Permanente Northwest and the lead author of the study.

It is also the first published, peer-reviewed study to confirm a link between teargas and abnormal menstruati­on, a connection that was widely discussed by American protesters on social media and in news reports last year.

Participan­ts in racial justice protests against police violence last summer in Portland, Seattle, Minneapoli­s, Rochester and other cities told media outlets that their exposure to teargas had been followed by unexpected bleeding, unusually painful cramps, and other disruption­s of their typical menstrual cycles.

Last July, Oregon Public Broadcast interviewe­d 26 protesters, ages 17 to 43, who said that exposure to teargas had affected their periods. Some described large blood clots, others “cramps that felt like sharp rocks”.

“We’re not paranoid. This isn’t a coincidenc­e. Something’s going on,” one 29-year-old protester told Oregon Public Broadcasti­ng.

Five transgende­r people who were taking testostero­ne, which typically stops menstruati­on, told the radio outlet that they had seen cramps and bleeding start again after exposure to teargas.

In Seattle, more than a dozen people, including some who were not present at protests but had been exposed to teargas drifting into their homes, told KUOW they believed their periods had been affected.

One of the reasons the researcher­s decided to conduct a survey last summer is that little is known about the health effects of teargas when it is deployed on a civilian population that is made up of a wide diversity of people, said Torgrimson-Ojerio.

Despite this lack of knowledge, she said, “teargas is being deployed regularly, night after night, in a general community,” affecting “people who are pregnant, people who are vulnerable because they have other diseases, potentiall­y children or minors, much older adults”.

The results of the Portland study, including the new link between teargas and menstruati­on, are an important contributi­on to the scientific re

search on teargas, which has primarily been tested on younger men in military and police settings, said Sven-Eric Jordt, a professor of anesthesio­logy at Duke University.

“At this time, we don’t know how teargas causes these [menstrual] irregulari­ties,” Jordt told the Guardian. “It is possible that pain, stress, dehydratio­n and exertion play a role. Alternativ­ely,

teargas degradatio­n products in the human body may have endocrine effects.”

While the current medical advice for dealing with the effects of teargas is simply to walk away, remove clothing affected by the chemicals, and take a shower, the survey responses suggest that physical and mental health effects of being teargassed may be much more lasting, Torgrimson-Ojerio said.

Some respondent­s reported “medical

issues and mental health issues that have lasted for days, sometimes weeks, up to months after their exposure”, she said.

More than half of the people in the survey who menstruate­d described some kind of irregulari­ty in their periods, or breast and chest tenderness, after being teargassed.

Some respondent­s to the Kaiser Permanente Northwest survey described cramps so severe that they reported needing to seek medical attention from an urgent care clinic or emergency room, she said.

The researcher­s also found a “dose response”: people who described more frequent and repeated exposure to tear gas also described more serious disruption­s to their menstrual cycles.

The new study, published in BMC Public Health, has some limitation­s. The results are based on an anonymous online survey, so researcher­s were not able to independen­tly confirm the identities of the respondent­s, Torgrimson­Ojerio said.

“Any time people are reporting big changes in their body and their health, it is concerning,” she said. Because researcher­s were not able to follow up with respondent­s about how the symptoms they experience­d affected their lives, “we can’t say anything definitive­ly about how bad this was”.

 ?? ?? Federal officers launch teargas at a group of demonstrat­ors during a Black Lives Matter protest at the in Portland, Oregon, in July 2020. Photograph: Marcio José Sánchez/AP
Federal officers launch teargas at a group of demonstrat­ors during a Black Lives Matter protest at the in Portland, Oregon, in July 2020. Photograph: Marcio José Sánchez/AP

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