
TheChosenChad
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Could coronavirus trigger a sudden menopause years before your time? Scores of long-Covid sufferers share their stories of how they lost their motherhood almost overnight
One poll of more than 100 members found 80 per cent reported their periods had changed since being infected with Covid.
Claire Hastie, who founded the Facebook group, reveals that members from around the world have reported strange menstrual fluctuations.
Claire, from Birmingham, who is still struggling to walk after contracting coronavirus in March, says: ‘Women have said their periods have stopped, while for others they’re less frequent.
www.dailymail.co.uk
- Dawn Knight, 46, missed her period a few weeks after she contracted Covid-19
- Hundreds of women have taken to social media to report similar experiences
- As months went on, it became clear Dawn had developed so-called long Covid
- Illness is thought to affect as many as one in 20 people, and especially women
One poll of more than 100 members found 80 per cent reported their periods had changed since being infected with Covid.
Claire Hastie, who founded the Facebook group, reveals that members from around the world have reported strange menstrual fluctuations.
Claire, from Birmingham, who is still struggling to walk after contracting coronavirus in March, says: ‘Women have said their periods have stopped, while for others they’re less frequent.

Could coronavirus trigger a sudden menopause years before your time?
The phenomenon of long Covid is now well documented. It is thought to affect as many as one in 20 people, and especially women, although researchers are not entirely sure why.