- Persona
Emily Roberts
Cohorts: Teens-20s
Condition: Hypothalamic Amenorrhoea
“It's been months since I had a period…at first it was quite convenient but now I'm getting worried something is really wrong”
Snapshot
- Name: Emily Roberts
- Age range: 20
- Life stage: University student, menstruating age but currently experiencing period loss
- Location: Durham, UK
- Occupation: Sports science undergraduate; part-time gym receptionist
- Relationship and family context: Lives in shared student flat; long-distance relationship with school boyfriend; perfectionist tendencies, doesn’t talk about stress or food habits with family
Health Context
- Relevant condition(s): Hypothalamic Amenorrhoea
- Density of condition(s): Uncommon – more common amongst athletes and women with eating disorders
- Key symptoms experienced: Absent periods for 7 months, fatigue, poor sleep, cold hands and feet, low libido, low mood, brittle nails, anxiety about eating more, obsessive exercise habits
- Severity and duration: Moderate; initially dismissed as “training hard,” but symptoms now affecting wellbeing
- Diagnosed or suspected: Self-suspected after researching “missed periods from exercise”; hasnʼt seen a doctor yet
- Current treatments or management: High protein/low calorie diet, 5-6 gym sessions weekly; recently began considering therapy after friend expressed concern
- Comorbidities or related factors: Perfectionism, orthorexic tendencies, body image concerns, stress from academic performance and self-comparison
Triggers and barriers
- Main triggers that worsen symptoms: Intense exercise, caloric restriction, lack of rest days, academic stress, social comparison (fitness influencers)
- Barriers to seeking care: Fear of weight gain, equating “health” with leanness, embarrassment about missing periods, belief doctors will “just tell her to eat more”
- Information gaps and misconceptions: Thinks period loss is “normal for athletes”; unaware it means her hormones (especially oestrogen) have shut down; hasn’t considered link to bone and fertility health
- Emotional drivers and concerns: Validation from fitness goals and discipline; fear of “losing control”; anxiety about eating more or resting; guilt when not training
Goals and needs
- Primary health goals: Get her period back without “losing fitness”; understand hormonal health; prevent long-term consequences
- Secondary lifestyle goals: Improve relationship with food and exercise; manage anxiety and perfectionism
- What “better” looks like to them: Having a balanced lifestyle where health isnʼt defined by restriction; feeling calm, strong, and hormonally stable again
- Relevant Resources
If your mood, confidence or ability to cope has changed during perimenopause or menopause, there is very likely a biological reason for […]
Menopause does not usually arrive all at once. For most women, it is a gradual transition that begins with hormone changes years […]
If your sleep has changed in your 40s or 50s, you are not imagining it. Waking in the night, lying awake for […]
If you have been prescribed Utrogestan, or you are wondering whether it might be right for you, it is very normal to […]
- Explore other personas