New app helps active women understand menstrual cycle for best possible training
When Olympic swimmer Allison Schmitt was 20 years old, doctors advised her to have an intrauterine device implanted to help with her anemia. A naturally inquisitive person, she said that the only question she could muster at the time was “Can I still have babies later in life?”
The doctors said yes, so she went ahead with the procedure. When she had the IUD removed eight years later, the procedure put her into an emotional and physical spiral, even as the planned 2020 Tokyo Olympics loomed.
“Once I got it out, I went through mental health struggles and I was bleeding more than I wasn’t bleeding, simply because I didn’t understand what it was doing to my body,” said Schmitt in a recent interview. “When I had it out for three to four months I was like — I’ve never been pregnant so I don’t know what it feels like — but my body swelled up and I thought I was pregnant.”
After consulting with a USA Swimming trainer, she was referred to the team at FitrWoman, a new free app that helps physically active and athletic women track their menstrual cycles. That group of sport scientists reassured Schmitt that her body was just adjusting its progesterone levels and would eventually balance itself out.