Period Health: 5 Daily Detox Tips to Decrease PMS and Encourage Hormonal Balance

Our amazing friends at Period Makeover wrote a blog post to help you manage the ups and downs of PMS!

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What is PMS?

Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) refers to many challenging and pesky symptoms that start during the second half of the menstrual cycle (14 days after the first day you started to bleed on your last period) and stop about 1-2 days after your period begins.

The most common symptoms include: 

  • Bloating 
  • Breast tenderness
  • Change in Bowel Habits (constipation or diarrhea)
  • Food cravings (especially for sugar!)
  • Headaches 
  • Fatigue
  • Decreased mood or anxiety
  • Mood swings 

So many women experience these symptoms!!  In fact, up to 75% of woman experience PMS during their childbearing years.

We all experience different PMS symptoms that can be attributed to various hormone imbalances, namely increased estrogen levels (estrogen dominance) and decreased progesterone at different points in our cycles. Hormone imbalances can occur due to a number of different factors such as poor diet, lack of exercise, constipation, stress, and excessive use of chemical-laden cosmetics.  By leading a healthy lifestyle and periodically detoxing, we can encourage a happy hormone balance in our bodies.


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Why Detox?

Surprisingly, before most women leave their homes every morning they may have already been exposed to over 100 different chemicals! This exposure is just from the deodorants, perfumes, creams, shampoos, makeup and toothpaste they use. Once women leave their homes they are exposed to another mix of chemicals:  the pollutants in the air, chemically treated water, perfumes, pesticides, hormones and fertilizers in food, tobacco (directly or indirectly) household chemicals, and many other sources. Then there is the potential exposure to chemicals on a less than daily basis that still impact our health such as the use of prescription or recreational drugs and alcohol. We breathe them in, absorb them through our skin, eat them, and drink them. 

This bombardment of chemicals we are exposed to increases the toxic load in our cells and organs, which has been linked a number of health problems including premenstrual syndrome (PMS). Studies have shown that chemical exposure to common chemicals can increase our chances of obesity, slow down our mental ability and disrupt our hormones. Additionally, stress and overexertion, food sensitivities, impaired liver function, light at night and negative thought patterns can lead to various imbalances in our body and also affect our hormones. 

Detoxing your body on a regular basis reduces the toxin levels in your body giving your organs a chance to catch up on their work, such as keeping your hormones in balance, which leads to healthier menstrual cycles and less PMS. We can also encourage a healthier hormonal balance by making small daily changes, contributing to a healthier body and a happier hormonal balance.


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By adopting some of the lifestyle habits below, you can help your body get rid of toxins and encourage hormonal balance in your body.

MAKE BREAKFAST COUNT. With a morning tonic of juice of ½ lemon, 2 caps of apple cider vinegar or a scoop of Spirulina in a large (500ml) glass of water every morning before breakfast. Warm or cold, you choose. This will get your liver going on it’s daily detox duties.  If you have acid reflux, try the water and spirulina (or other green food) without the lemon water and apple cider vinegar. After the tonic, enjoy a breakfast high in protein (eggs, nuts, seeds, protein powder or even some left-overs from the night before). Our bodies need protein for proper detoxification and having protein in the morning can help keep our blood sugar stable over the course of the day- keeping us for satiated and in a better mood! Recommendations: Make sure you choose filtered water.


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SWEAT. Working up a sweat is one of the best ways to boost energy and mood all while flushing the lymphatic system of toxins. Moving your body encourages bowel movements, which is essential for hormonal balance. Get your move on or sit in a sauna or steam room. Pick your medicine. Recommendations: Yoga, walking, biking, dancing tai chi, sauna, steam room.

MAKE TIME TO DE-STRESS. Stress causes havoc in the body by increasing the release of cortisol (a hormone that is released in response to stress), throwing off hormonal balance (namely decreasing progesterone), increasing cravings for sweets and carbohydrates, increasing acid production in the stomach… etc etc etc. It’s just not worth it. So do yourself a favor and take a breather. Recommendations: slow down to smell the flowers, stop, go for a walk and enjoy the scenery around you, close your eyes and take 3 deep breaths, change your route home from work, put away your smart phone, get your yoga on or you could really de-stress it out and meditate for 15 minutes every morning.

SLEEP. This recommendation is non-negotiable (especially during times of stress!!) We suggest 7.5-8 hrs of zzzzz’s. Every. Single. Night. Sleep is an essential part hormonal balancing and anti-aging. Sleep is also necessary for the detoxification process as it gives your body the time to reset, repair, rejuvenate and renew. Having a good night’s rest changes your outlook on life, your hunger patterns, your exercise, your productivity… you get the point. Just do it.  Recommendations: Get to bed 15 minutes earlier each night, turn off all electronic gadgets 1 hr before bed, sleep in a quiet, cool and dark room.

EAT ORGANIC AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE. Even small amounts of pesticides disrupt hormonal balance, clog up your detoxification pathways and require a lot of work for your body to detox. Plus, these chemicals are harmful to the wildlife and the planet. Recommendations: Check out the guidelines set by the Environmental Working Group (http://www.ewg.org/foodnews/). They put out a list of the “dirty dozen” and “clean fifteen”, helping us to understand what fruits and vegetables are really important to buy organic (and which ones are ok to buy conventional!).

By Gabriela Delano-Stephens R.H.N and Dr. Emily Lipinski, ND

Boys Health Management Program – A Summary

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It was about 10 months ago that the initial conversation about conducting a Boys Health Management Project was had with the Femme team and I in Toronto. Now, in the final week of implementation all of the preliminary ideas, plans and groundwork have been realized in Moshi, Tanzania with great success.

The Boys Health Management Project was created to include male youth in the conversation Femme International started with female youth regarding sexual health and gender equality. So far, the BHM project has reached 49 male youth, 15 participants from form 2, 13 from form 3 at Mangoto Secondary School, in the village of Kahe located outside of Moshi. An additional 21 youth were reached at the Pamoja Boys and Girls Club located in Moshi. The age range for the participants was approximately 10-19 years, with one 50 year old participant! 


One of the main objectives of the BHM pilot project was to increase the knowledge of male youth in sexual health and gender equality. It is to my excitement and satisfaction to see that the objective was achieved. Christian, the Coordinator of the BHM Project, took the leading role in teaching the content of the BHM Project in Swahili. He was able to inspire and teach in a style that mixed factual information and real life examples that visibly impacted the boys. I was able to see that moment in the Form 2 workshop conducted at Mangoto Secondary School where the boys displayed their capacity to be challenged and to gain a new perspective in the exercise we created to talk about gender roles. As a facilitator, if there is a moment you’re looking to see if material is retained, understood and debated among a group of people, that was it. Beyond the visual and verbal indications given by the boys regarding their retention of the material, their post workshop quizzes admitted their high level of understanding.

Of course there are always challenges along the way, creating a culturally applicable workshop that could impact male youth seemed a daunting task at first, but with perseverance and help from the close knit Femme team we were able to overcome that obstacle.

 Personally, it has been an extremely valuable experience to be able to create a curriculum and workshop with Christian and to learn and grow through the various phases of development of a new project. I have learned a great deal from not only the design and implementation process, but from the Femme staff. I am excited to see the future opportunities for the BHM project. 

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Currently, the Femme team, Christian and I will be going through the wrap up process of the BHM pilot project. We will be using our remaining time in Tanzania to look for funding opportunities that will allow us to scale up the BHM project. This will hopefully allow us to reach other communities surrounding Moshi, conducting workshops in areas that the FHM program previously reached. This is an essential step in bringing the conversation full circle between female and male youth in impacting their knowledge on sexual health and gender.

Given our successes, triumphs and challenges we have learned a great deal and want to take our lessons learned and knowledge and put it towards the future success of the BHM project. 


Devon Malcolm, BHM Program Officer

Reflections about the Boy’s Health Management Program

This fall, Femme introduced the Boys Health Education program and ran a pilot project with students at a secondary school in Kahe. Below, BHE Coordinator Christian reflects on his experiences as Facilitator.

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The Boys Health Management program was designed to complement the Feminine Health Management program, and the pilot project was implemented with Form 2 and Form 3 students at a secondary school in Kahe, Kilimanjaro Region.

As the Facilitator, I covered a wide range of material including: essential hygiene, gender, consent in life and in relationships, male anatomy and different sexually transmitted infections.

The workshops were active, sometimes run by the boys themselves as we encouraged participation to foster activeness among the students. Sometimes they had to stand, come to the board and fill out diagrams or help explain to their fellows their understanding of the lesson. The workshops as a whole ended with the provision of a gift, the boy health kits. The kits include all the necessary equipment that a man/boy needs to ensure they keep their bodies clean from different infections like fungus. 


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The success stories

It has been an amazing experience with the boys! We have learned that when impacting knowledge to an individual or group of people, the process should go hand in hand with the real life examples, whether from the individual’s experience, facilitator’s experience or from other people’s stories. The workshops are built from practical real life experiences; this style of workshop allows us creatively impact the knowledge of the participants. For example: on the topic of gender, we created charts that asked the participants to come up to the board and fill out the different roles or duties belonging to a mother and father. Further into the lesson we asked the students to fill out the roles and responsibilities of a single mother and father. The purpose of this being we wanted students to challenge the way they think about the differences in gender roles.

Also, it has been a good experience as the facilitator. I am getting a lot of feedback from the boys as  they have reported to me saying they are using the kits and it has been good for them in keeping their bodies clean because “they fill heavy when they are dirty but very light and comfortable after bath/shaving.”

Christian Massawe, BHM Coordinator