
Credit: Waterstones
On Radio 5 Live, Naga Munchetty once did something out of the ordinary for a broadcaster with her level of experience. The microphone was turned inward by her.
She said to the audience, “I am in pain right now as I sit here talking to you.” Not in a symbolic sense. physically.
She had been delivering the news steadily for decades, giving the impression that maintaining composure was a professional reflex. She manages the delicate choreography of live television, asks insightful questions, and keeps interviews flowing on BBC Breakfast. The audience perceives authority. The pain radiating down her thighs from her pelvis is invisible to them.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Name | Naga Munchetty |
| Profession | Broadcaster and journalist; presenter on BBC Breakfast and BBC Radio 5 Live |
| Condition | Adenomyosis (chronic womb condition) |
| Diagnosed | 2022 (after decades of symptoms) |
| Key Symptoms | Severe pelvic pain, heavy bleeding, vomiting, fainting |
| Advocacy | Gave evidence to the Women and Equalities Committee; speaks publicly on women’s health |
| Reference | BBC News – “BBC’s Naga Munchetty reveals womb condition adenomyosis” (May 2023) |
Munchetty has adenomyosis, a disorder in which the womb’s lining develops into the muscle wall. Although it is not fatal, it has the potential to change one’s life. She has stated that the pain can seem unrelenting. Once, a flare-up got so bad that her husband had to call for an ambulance.
Many women find her story unsettling, not only because of the diagnosis but also because of the delay. She spent over thirty years seeking assistance. They told her that she was unlucky. that it was typical. that everyone managed.
I recall being a little shocked by how long she had been ignored when I watched that broadcast.
Although adenomyosis is believed to impact approximately 10% of women, awareness of the condition is still lacking. It can even be missed by scans. Hormonal therapies may conceal it. Additionally, symptoms like nausea, fainting, and heavy bleeding are all too frequently grouped under the umbrella term “bad periods.”
The term “gaslit,” which Munchetty has used, used to seem too dramatic for medical consultations but now seems clinically accurate. You start to doubt your own threshold when medical professionals normalize your pain for an extended period of time.
This situation has a tension that is difficult to overcome. Ten-minute GP appointments, waiting lists, and overworked specialists are some of the pressures on the NHS. Clinicians will legitimately argue that they operate within structural limitations. It’s not always easy to diagnose. There is overlap in symptoms.
However, when several women report the same minimization patterns, the issue ceases to feel unique.
Munchetty’s pivotal moment occurred following an especially severe bout of pain and bleeding. In order to prevent further delay, she sought private care after seeing a general practitioner who specialized in women’s health. She has admitted that having that choice was a blessing.
That acknowledgement is significant. While advocacy from a well-known face spreads more widely, it also highlights injustice. What would happen to people without Munchetty’s platform if someone as articulate and tenacious as she had trouble finding answers?
The only sure cure, a hysterectomy, has so far been resisted by her. She has discussed the practical calculus—six weeks off work in a cutthroat broadcasting environment—in public talks. That calculation has an honesty about it that strikes a chord.
She informed MPs on October 18, 2023, that she had been “deemed normal” and instructed to “suck it up.”
Statistics are not as memorable as that sentence.
She has always worked to hold those in positions of authority accountable. This time, the focus was on a system that claims to be getting better. Professional associations report an increase in awareness of the government’s Women’s Health Strategy for England. Though not uniform, progress is real.
Additionally, there is a change in Munchetty’s reputation. She is now a campaigner, but she used to be mostly a calm newsreader. It has not been a smooth transition. She acknowledged that she was afraid of being perceived as weak for raising her voice.
The harsh studio lighting is exposing, cool, and bright. The majority of the audience would never have guessed that she was presenting through waves of discomfort beneath them.
It is easy to present her story as one of overcoming hardship. It seems too tidy. Awareness does not make adenomyosis go away. It intrudes, flares, and recedes.
The volume of the conversation has changed. She has received letters from women who have had similar experiences. Physicians have acknowledged that they were never instructed on the condition.
It wasn’t a given that Munchetty would speak in public. It was a decision—a risk for one’s career in a society that values fortitude.
By doing this, she changed the focus of the story from individual suffering to group scrutiny. And something subtly changed with that change: the belief that suffering should just be put up with.

