Nancy King Reame, Professor Emerita at Columbia University's School of Nursing, spent decades researching tampon safety, starting from the early eighties.
Nancy King Reame, Professor Emerita at Columbia University's School of Nursing, has spent decades researching tampon safety. She was on the FDA task force that investigated the link between tampons and toxic shock syndrome in the early eighties - a deadly outbreak that killed dozens of women and affected hundreds more. Her research led to the absorbency scale printed on every box of tampons sold. Nancy King Reame says even today, we still don't fully know what goes into a tampon.
Nancy Reame is the Mary Dickey Lindsay Professor of Health Promotion, Risk Reduction (Emerita), at the Columbia University School of Nursing. This episode covers:
-The history of toxic shock syndrome and its link to tampon absorbency in the 1980s
-How tampons are still tested using a synthetic vagina and blue-dyed salt water — not menstrual fluid
-Why we don't know the specifics of what goes into a tampon
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What to listen to next: another episode on women’s health history - the story of the Dalkon Shield IUD: https://overlooked.simplecast.com/episodes/the-dark-history-of-the-dalkon-shield-iud-with-chikako-takeshita
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