By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept

Need To Know

News, culture and entertainment you need to know

Font ResizerAa
  • U.K News
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Travel
  • Fitness and health
  • Tech
  • Motors
  • Sports
  • More
Reading: ‘Childbirth left me with life-changing injuries – it took 20 years to get my freedom back’
Share
Font ResizerAa

Need To Know

News, culture and entertainment you need to know

  • U.K News
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Travel
  • Fitness and health
  • Tech
  • Motors
  • Sports
  • More
Search
  • U.K News
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Travel
  • Fitness and health
  • Tech
  • Motors
  • Sports
  • More
Follow US
Need To Know > Fitness and health > ‘Childbirth left me with life-changing injuries – it took 20 years to get my freedom back’
After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Fitness and health

‘Childbirth left me with life-changing injuries – it took 20 years to get my freedom back’

Ria Newman
Last updated: July 11, 2024 7:27 am
Ria Newman Published July 11, 2024
Share
Jo Prance. (Picture: Jam Press)
SHARE

A mum who suffered an injury during childbirth with catastrophic lasting effects has shared how she got her life back – after being largely housebound with chronic incontinence.

What midwives originally thought was a minor perineal tear from labour turned out to be more significant, causing horrendous repercussions for Jo Prance that would last for two decades after welcoming her son.

The now 48-year-old from Surrey has battled stress urinary incontinence, faecal incontinence, prolapse and severe pelvic pain.

READ MORE: ‘My baby suffered bizarre symptoms for a YEAR before being diagnosed with condition no one has heard of’

To date, she’s had 19 operations to try and tackle her symptoms, including getting a stoma and having a mesh sling inserted.

After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Jo Prance. (Picture: Jam Press)

She’s also had to work hard to improve and maintain her pelvic floor health, with the help of training devices like femfit.

Having felt “dictated by access to toilets” for the last 20 years, Jo now finally feels free and is sharing her story to lift the stigma around incontinence.

“[After the birth], I was originally told I had a second-degree perineal tear and that it was repaired,” said the fitness consultant.

“But it later transpired that it was more significant and a year after birth I started having issues with stress urinary incontinence.

“I’ve been through two decades of operations, surgeries and treatments, and I still have to constantly keep on top of my pelvic floor.

“It’s been a gruelling journey – physically challenging and mentally exhausting.

“The personal toll of the injury has been immense.”

In 2000, Jo had a mesh sling inserted to support her bladder – which helped, for a time – but left her with pelvic pain that became chronic.

On top of this, she started suffering with the aforementioned faecal incontinence.

After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Jo and her son at her graduation 6 months post birth. (Picture: Jam Press)

Jo said: “The problems escalated; I tried numerous medications and treatments for the incontinence, and had to irrigate my bowels daily.

“I also had prolapses as a result of the childbirth injury and had a series of operations to try and fix this.

“My son has pretty much grown up alongside these issues being dealt with, and me needing access to bathrooms.

“On the school run I’d have to stop various times [to use the bathroom].

“At work, I might choose not to eat or drink some days because I was worried about having a problem with my bowel.

“It impacted every area of my life and occupied my every move.

“Toilets became everything and I was carrying around changing kit for myself, as well as my child.”

Jo was even left struggling to walk, which she says was from the pain the mesh sling left her in.

She said: “My body was a mess.

“There was a nerve in my leg that was affected by the mesh.

“I had a couple of episodes of my leg not working properly before I sought private help.

“16 years after the mesh was inserted, I had it removed privately, which finally resolved the chronic pain.”

Between the leg issue and the prolapses, Jo was in enough pain that she was forced to leave her fitness job at the NHS.

After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Jo’s 1st competitive swimming competition since birth injury and after stoma surgery. (Picture: Jam Press)

It wasn’t until she opted to have a colostomy in 2019 – 21 years after giving birth – that she started to get her life back, and dived back into fitness.

Jo said: “It was a turning point for me as it gave me back my freedom.

“I’m a very fit and active person, and each time I’ve had an operation I’ve had to start over again.

“I feel I have been rebuilt in a way.”

To aid in her efforts, Jo has been using femfit, a pelvic floor training device which consists of a thin, flexible silicone sensor capable of visualising the activation of the pelvic floor muscles.

The sensor, created by Junofem, is temporarily inserted into the vagina for the duration of the pelvic floor exercising session – typically around 10-15 minutes.

A row of tiny pressure sensors located inside measure the strength of contraction of the user’s pelvic floor muscles, while simultaneously measuring abdominal pressure.

After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Jo Prance. (Picture: Jam Press)

This information is transmitted wirelessly to a bespoke app on a user’s smartphone to provide real-time feedback guiding correct technique.

Jo said: “Surgery doesn’t always give you the solution you are looking for and they don’t always last for decades.

“I’ve had a lot of surgeries and with the pelvic floor maintenance I now do, I’m trying to mitigate the need for any more in the future.

“I found femfit earlier this year, so I was already familiar with pelvic floor training and had used various devices, but this has greater sensitivity and is much slimmer.

“It’s a great device – especially for someone who has a basic understanding of pelvic floor health, as it builds on that knowledge.”

Jo’s health has now improved to the point where she is currently preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro next year, alongside 19 other women – nine of whom also have stomas.

After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Jo Prance. (Picture: Jam Press)

The group is fundraising for charity Chameleon Buddies, who work with Kenyan women and girls with stomas following childbirth injuries.

To mark 25 years since the original injury, Jo has also started a challenge to try 25 new things over the course of the year to “start over again”.

She said: “I spent years keeping myself fit but not being able to put myself in the positions which I now can, because I’d need to go to the toilet.

“A swimming club would have been impossible because it would have been dictated by access to toilets.

After 20 years of chronic incontinence and pain from childbirth, Jo Prance shares her journey to recovery, using pelvic floor training and preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro.
Jo and her son at his graduation 6 months after my stoma surgery. (Picture: Jam Press)

“My health is the best it’s been in a long time.

“Six weeks after having my stoma fitted, I was back in the pool, and I’ve since completed my yoga teacher training too.

“I’m now picking up where my life was on pause for so long.”

“It’s important to me to share my story and help raise awareness because people just don’t talk about these things.

“I want people facing these issues not to hide away and to seek help.”

READ MORE: ‘I was fit, healthy and in my 30s – I had no idea my symptoms were cancer’

You Might Also Like

Tourist loses brain activity after drinking suspected methanol-tainted wine abroad

Doctor issues urgent sexual health warning to male England fans ahead of World Cup opener

‘Doctors refused my double hip replacement as I was too young – but at 23 I had no choice’

‘I became addicted to weight loss jabs – now I’m battling anorexia after losing eight stone in just a year’

Brit boxer left in coma after he fell off a tuk-tuk – smashing his head on the road

TAGGED:childrenConditionFitnessHealthpregnancypregnantWoman
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
InstagramFollow
TiktokFollow
Most read
A cliff collapsed onto swimmers and boats at a popular Italian beauty spot - dramatic footage shows boulders and a huge dust cloud crashing into the bay at Portonovo.
World

Terrifying moment cliff collapses on swimmers and boats at popular tourist spot

Lee Bullen Lee Bullen June 16, 2026
Urgent warning to Brits as scammers pose as Boots and target 8.9 million inboxes
Influencer arrested after posting negative video about holiday
Woman slips and falls 100ft to death while applying insect repellent on steep trail
World Cup star’s visa expires after ONE match leaving future at tournament shrouded in doubt

Categories

  • Lifestyle
  • U.K News
  • World
  • Technology
  • Business
Quick Link
  • My Bookmark
  • Interests
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Write for us
  • Authors
  • Contact
Top Categories
  • Business
  • Environment
  • Lifestyle
  • Technology
  • Fitness and health
  • Property
  • Entertainment

Subscribe US

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Read Next

Zoe Castle is the only known person on Earth with her unique combination of conditions - the 29-year-old has a heart defect, DiGeorge Syndrome and near-total blindness.
Fitness and health

‘I’m the only person on EARTH with this rare combination of conditions – I’ll never live without fear’

June 15, 2026
Dutch schoolchildren were swept off their feet by a massive wave after watching a cargo ship launch up close - seconds after one pupil confidently declared: "There won't even be any water."
World

School kids wiped out as ship launch triggers monster wave

June 12, 2026
Told he'd never reach 40, a Belfast man lost nine stone on Mounjaro and used a daily six-step skincare routine to avoid surgery - and stunned his tummy tuck surgeons.
Fitness and health

‘I lost nine stone and was convinced I needed a tummy tuck – then doctors delivered shock verdict’

June 12, 2026
A man going through cancer treatment was left £4,500 in debt due to his employer's payroll error - and told it would only be wiped if he deleted his social media posts.
Fitness and health

Brit dad lands in £4,500 debt after work ‘mistakenly’ keeps paying him following cancer diagnosis

June 12, 2026
CCTV captured the moment a four-year-old girl was shoved face-first off a slide in Hanoi - she was hospitalised with an eye socket injury after landing five feet below.
World

Girl, 4, hospitalised with eye socket injury after boy shoves her off slide

June 11, 2026
An influencer with 1.2m followers was diagnosed with cancer while eight months pregnant - and has begun chemotherapy just weeks after giving birth to her second daughter.
World

Influencer, 28, ‘faces new journey’ as she starts chemo after shock cancer diagnosis during pregnancy

June 11, 2026
A Newcastle mum defied doctors and spent £10,000 flying her severely autistic son to Turkey for stem cell therapy - and says he has not self-harmed a single time since.
Fitness and health

Brit mum ignores doctors’ advice and jets autistic son abroad for stem cell therapy

June 11, 2026
A teacher prescribed steroid eczema creams since she was just six months old says stopping them left her face unrecognisable and skin cracked and oozing from every inch.
Fitness and health

Teacher left ‘looking like a burnt hamster’ after cream prescribed by GP causes agonising effects

June 10, 2026

Categories

  • Lifestyle
  • U.K News
  • World
  • Technology
  • Business
Quick Link
  • My Bookmark
  • Interests
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Write for us
  • Authors
  • Contact
Top Categories
  • Business
  • Environment
  • Lifestyle
  • Technology
  • Fitness and health
  • Property
  • Entertainment

Subscribe US

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

2024 © Need To Know. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?