
Laura Maguire
Laura Maguire said she often spends days in bed due to pain
Marie-Louise ConnollyHealth correspondent, BBC News NI
A woman waiting for endometriosis treatment has said the pain she experiences is like having barbed wire in her body.
Laura Maguire, who is 25 and from Londonderry, has been put in an early medicated menopause as she awaits surgery - a wait which she has been told could take several years.
According to the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG), 59,733 women in Northern Ireland are now on gynaecology waiting lists, an increase of almost 18% in 12 months.
The Department of Health has previously said they accept the findings of earlier expert reports, that gynaecology waiting times are unacceptable and they are included in the current review of hospital waiting lists.
'Waiting lists are too long'

Laura Maguire
Maguire described the pain as "excruciating"
Endometriosis occurs when tissue like the lining of the womb grows in other places, such as ovaries, fallopian tubes and other organs.
"The pain is excruciating, at its worst it's like barbed wire inside me and clinging to my organs. I am so ill I can often spend days in bed," Maguire said.
She said she is furious that she is having to go through an early medicated menopause because there are too many people ahead of her on the surgical waiting list.
"I am only 25 and I am doing this to my body through no choice," she said.
"I need surgery to remove the disease, but the waiting lists are too long. I'm told there are too many more serious cases ahead of me."
She said large cysts on her ovaries are also causing pain and she's been advised that surgery is her only option.
"My partner and I want to have more children," she added.
"I have my little girl, but as a young woman I want to make sure that I can have an option to get pregnant again - at this stage I just don't know."

Laura Maguire
Maguire said cysts on her ovaries are also causing her pain
The new analysis from the RCOG shows that at the start of 2026, gynaecology waiting lists across the UK "remain in crisis" and waiting times in Northern Ireland remain the highest.
A spokesperson said if those waiting across Northern Ireland's five health trusts were to stand shoulder to shoulder, the queue would be over two miles longer than it was in November 2024, stretching almost 15 miles.
Across the UK, a total of 743,312 women are waiting for essential gynaecology care.
Dr Alison Wright, president of the RCOG, said members were working tirelessly to meet rising demand but pressure across services mean capacity is stretched at every stage of care.
"With the right investment, there is a real opportunity to change this situation for women.
"By re-prioritising the health needs of 51% of the population, we can make genuine improvements to women's lives - ensuring they can access the high-quality care they need, when they need it," she said.
In 2024, a major review of gynae services by the Getting it Right First-Time team (GIRFT) - an expert medical review team - said health trusts needed to re-prioritise those waiting over a year for surgery.
Its report was critical of the length of time women were having to wait.
Following an investigation by BBC News NI into gynae waiting times in 2023 the RCOG described the system as "close to the brink".
Consultant surgeon Hans Nagar has previously said the "physical and psychological impact of waiting on women should not be underestimated".
Nagar also said that the system for dealing with gynae conditions such as endometriosis was not working and that women in NI are "getting a raw deal".
'Debilitating and life-changing'

Marie Brown
Marie Brown said her life has been "ruined waiting for treatment for endometriosis"
The latest estimates suggest over half (56%) of patients are now waiting over 52 weeks.
Women who have spoken to BBC News NI said waiting up to five years just to be seen by a consultant and even longer for surgery is not unusual.
Among those waiting is Marie Brown from Belfast, who said she waited 20 years for a diagnosis.
"During that time I was told mainly by male doctors that it was just period pain and I would have to live with it," she said.
Brown, who was a teacher, had to take medical retirement because she said she couldn't physically work.
"My life has been ruined waiting for treatment for endometriosis," she said.
"The pain is chronic - at one stage I was so bloated and unable to eat they thought I may have ovarian cancer.
"Gynae issues and especially endometriosis is just not prioritised - it is debilitating and life changing but just not taken seriously by the health service."
While she did eventually have surgery, she said it wasn't successful and she has been back on the waiting list for almost two years.
The RCOG has said 2026 must be a turning point for women waiting for gynaecology care.
It has called for faster, more decisive action to support women already waiting and to tackle the underlying capacity challenges driving long delays in Northern Ireland.

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