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Inside the
Controversial Technique That Could Help
Women
By Rebecca Grant
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Five women stand around a bed in a bungalow outside Los Angeles, each wearing a pair of latex
surgical gloves and holding various pieces of equipment. One is holding a speculum and a
flashlight; another, lubricant and an apparatus known as the Del-Em, which consists of a cannula (a
thin tube) and a syringe attached to a container with two tubes.
A woman named Lauren reclines on a bed, preparing to have her menstrual blood extracted.
Another member of the group, Robin, sits between Lauren's legs and inserts the cannula into her
uterus. Then another woman, Maxine, begins to use the syringe as a pump. Lauren's menstrual
blood flows through the plastic tube and into the collection jar. About 20 minutes later, her period is
over.
access abortion. One member of the group, Lorraine Rothman, fashioned a device specifically for
the procedure called the Del Em.
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The activists dubbed the practice "menstrual extraction" and began spreading the word, encouraging
women to form their own ME groups and demonstrating how to use the device. Brandi Kilburn is a
doula who participates in a menstrual extraction group in Albuquerque. She said her group has been
together for around four years and has a core group of 10 members, with an additional 10 members
who are intermittently involved.
"We meet either by whim or by need," Kilburn said by phone. "Any member can call the group and
ask to get together for this, and we'll meet as regularly as every couple weeks to every couple
months."
Kilburn said a woman might want to use menstrual extraction as a way to avoid her period during
an upcoming vacation or romantic encounter, or maybe she just wants to avoid going through
severe cramping. Either way, for some women, menstrual extraction is a conduit to connect with
their own bodies and/or to help other women connect with theirs.
encounter. This application is particularly relevant in the developing world, where it is referred to as
menstrual regulation, or MR.
According to the National Abortion Federation, MR represents "a crucial strategy to circumvent
anti-abortion laws." In Bangladesh, for example, the practice has been a staple of the national
family planning program since 1979. According to a report from the Guttmacher Institute, around
468,000 MR procedures are performed in the country every year.
"Abortion is illegal in Bangladesh, but MR in this specific way is legal," Isaac Maddow-Zimet, who
co-authored the study, said by phone.
Menstrual regulation is also widely practiced in Cuba, where it is offered to any woman whose
period is two weeks late without a pregnancy test. While abortion is legal in Cuba, some women
actually prefer to use MR as their contraceptive method, with 36 out of 1,000 women opting for the
procedure, according to 2004 statistics.
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The feminists that developed ME were guided by the principle of self-determination, but before
women can assume greater agency over their reproductive health, they first have to understand how
their bodies work and overcome apprehension regarding them.
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A practice with extreme risks: The DIY aspect of ME has obviously made some medical
professionals uncomfortable. While Downer and Kilburn both insist that when done properly, the
practice is safe, doctors do not necessarily agree.
Dr. Brian Levine, a board certified OB/GYN who currently serves as the Practice Director for the
fertility clinic CCRM New York, said that while the prospect of using an "aspiration kit" (like the
Del-Em) at home with friends might seem appealing to some women, it is far too risky.
"This is a serious medical procedure with serious ramifications if not done correctly," Levine said.
"Any time you are instrumenting anything into the uterus, you put yourself at risk of perforation, of
bleeding and hemorrhage, of infection, of sterility. It is not something to experiment with. I think
the women who say it's safe to do at home are overstating their capabilities."
When ME is also performed for pregnancy termination purposes, there's also a risk of the
abortion being incomplete or unfinished, which can lead to various health complications such as
hemorrhage or infection. "Health professionals experienced in performing abortions are more
capable of determining whether the products of conception have been fully removed," Louise Tyrer
wrote in a 1993 article on the procedure for the feminist publication On the Issues Magazine.
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Banishing period stigma: Today, ME exists in a relative state of obscurity. While at its peak,
Downer estimates that there were around 100 active ME groups in the country, today there are just a
handful of active ME groups left.
That's in part due to the aforementioned risks, as well as the fact that women now have greater
access to abortion services: following Roe v. Wade, clinics opened up across the country, so ME was
used less often as an abortifacient.
ME is also now rarely used for the purpose of menstrual extraction, in large part because the
procedure is likely to make most women squeamish. It is far easier, and less daunting, to buy
tampons and pads then to assemble a group of like-minded women who feel safe vacuuming each
other's uterine lining out, and are willing to invest the time learning to do so.
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Yet the purpose of ME, Kilburn said, is to get women to confront a part of their biology that society
wants them to suppress, due to the stigma surrounding menstruation. "We are spoon-fed shame at
every level about being sexual, female or self-capable," she said. "When they hear about ME,
women will hit you with the first impulse of revulsion. But once they let it sink in, they realize it's
not as difficult or disturbing as they thought."
Kilburn believes learning about ME is to learn about female anatomy firsthand. Because undergoing
a menstrual extraction requires the recipient to be comfortable opening her legs and having her
menstrual blood sucked out in front of a group, the process puts women in intimate contact with
what it means to have a period. She said that by giving women the opportunity to explore their
bodies and participate in a community that honors femaleness, ME can be an empowering
experience.
"I work in labor and delivery, and I see hosts of women who don't realize they can take their health
into their own hands," Kilburn said. "They are dissociated from that knowledge, and this can limit
their personal freedom. Menstrual Extraction is liberating because it provides a powerful feeling of
capability."
Her group is trying to raise awareness about ME among the next generation of women and inspire
new groups to form so the knowledge for whatever purpose does not get lost.
"I'm nearing the end of my childbearing years, and for me, it's vital that that Menstrual Extraction
and self-awareness is distributed among the younger crowd," she said. "Access to yourself and an
education about your own health, especially in this day and age when medical care can be on the
line, is phenomenally useful and healthy. We have to make sure women know how to do this."