Why Am I Still in Pain After Endometriosis Excision Surgery?
Why Am I Still in Pain After Endometriosis Excision Surgery? Endometriosis Was Removed. So Why Does the Pain...
Join thousands of patients getting monthly clinical insights, condition education, and treatment updates from the team that has spent 10+ years on the front lines of pelvic pain and endometriosis care.
Locations Nationwide
Years of Expertise
Patients Treated Annually
Pelvic pain is dismissed. Endometriosis takes an average of 8 years to diagnose. We built this newsletter because patients deserve better access to the information that helps them advocate for themselves.
We respect your inbox. One email per month, no spam, unsubscribe any time.
of PRM patients report significant improvement in pain and function
reduction in ER visits among PRM patients
locations across 10 states (and growing)
years leading pelvic pain and endometriosis care
No fluff. No generic wellness tips. Every issue is written by or in collaboration with PRM's clinical team.
Deep dives into conditions like endometriosis, CPPS, pelvic floor hypertonia, and interstitial cystitis — written so you actually understand what is happening in your body.
Real stories from real patients who were dismissed, misdiagnosed, and finally found answers. You are not alone and you are not imagining it.
What is new in pelvic pain treatment, what the research says, and what it means for your care. Straight from the clinicians on the front lines.
Scripts for talking to your doctor, questions to ask at your next appointment, and resources to help you fight for the care you deserve.
Subscribers get first access to new guides, quizzes, and tools from PRM before they are released to the public.
New PRM locations, new providers, and what is happening near you. We are growing to make sure care is accessible wherever you are.
A preview of the kind of content you will get in every newsletter issue.
Join the PRM newsletter and get monthly insights from the clinical team that has dedicated over a decade to making sure pelvic pain patients are seen, heard, and treated.