- Persona
Harriet McDowell
Cohorts: 30s-40s
Condition: Prolactinoma
“Iʼve been dealing with symptoms for a while, but itʼs hard to ignore work and daily life long enough to properly address it.”
Snapshot
- Name: Harriet McDowell
- Age range: 33
- Life stage: Young professional, balancing freelance career, health concerns, and personal life
- Location: Cotswolds
- Occupation: Freelance social media manager working remotely with multiple clients
- Relationship and family context: Lives with partner, socially active but with fluctuating routines; close network of friends but irregular schedules limit consistency
Health Context
- Relevant condition(s): Prolactinoma (pituitary prolactin-producing tumour)
- Density of condition(s): Relatively uncommon but the most common functional pituitary tumour in women of reproductive age
- Key symptoms experienced: Irregular or absent periods, low libido, headaches, fatigue, brain fog, possible galactorrhoea, mood fluctuations, difficulty concentrating
- Severity and duration: Chronic, often developing gradually over months to years; symptoms may fluctuate depending on prolactin levels and treatment adherence
- Diagnosed or suspected: diagnosed following blood tests and MRI; may be under specialist care but not always fully understood by the patient
- Current treatments or management: Dopamine agonist medication (e.g. cabergoline or bromocriptine), regular blood monitoring, periodic MRI scans, lifestyle adjustments
- Comorbidities or related factors: Stress, disrupted sleep patterns, hormonal imbalance effects on mood, potential anxiety around long-term health and fertility
Triggers and barriers
- Main triggers that worsen symptoms: Stress from freelance workload, inconsistent routines, poor sleep, missed medication doses, hormonal fluctuations, burnout, overworking without rest
- Barriers to seeking care: Time constraints, feeling stable enough to delay appointments, difficulty prioritising health over work, lack of clarity about symptoms
- Information gaps and misconceptions: Limited understanding of long-term implications, uncertainty about fertility and hormone regulation, confusion around symptom variability, lack of awareness of links between symptoms and prolactin levels
- Emotional drivers and concerns: Anxiety about fertility, frustration with persistent fatigue, desire to maintain career productivity, fear of long-term tumour impact, feeling of being “on top of it” while quietly managing ongoing symptoms
Goals and needs
- Primary health goals: Stabilise hormone levels, reduce prolactin, restore regular menstrual function, improve energy and cognitive clarity
- Secondary lifestyle goals: Maintain flexibility in freelance work, sustain productivity, preserve independence, avoid health interfering with career progression
- What “better” looks like to them: Consistent energy throughout the day, clearer thinking, regular cycles, fewer symptoms interfering with work, feeling in control of both health and schedule
- Relevant Resources
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