Inflammation has become a major buzzword in women’s health and for many good reasons. From painful periods and hormonal imbalances to fatigue, weight gain, bloating, and skin flare-ups, inflammation often sits quietly at the root of many everyday struggles.
But while it can feel overwhelming, understanding inflammation is one of the most empowering steps a woman can take toward feeling lighter, calmer, and more in control of her body.
What is inflammation?
This is your body’s natural defence mechanism, a way of protecting you from injury, infection, or physical stress. Inflammation is a good thing, in small doses. It helps you heal wounds, recover from workouts, and fight off invaders. But when inflammation becomes long-term, the body stays in a low-grade state of stress. This prolonged internal “alarm” can disrupt hormones, digestion, metabolism, skin health, and even mood.
How inflammation shows up in a woman’s body
Many women tend to experience inflammation differently and, in many cases, more intensely than men due to hormonal fluctuations and conditions unique to female health.
Hormonal imbalances & painful periods
Oestrogen, progesterone, and inflammation are closely connected. When inflammatory markers are high, PMS symptoms, cramps, and cycle irregularities often worsen.
Fatigue & sluggish metabolism
Chronic inflammation places stress on the thyroid, adrenal glands, and metabolic processes — leaving women feeling tired, foggy, and bloated.
Skin issues
Inflammation can trigger:
- Acne
- Rosacea
- Eczema
- Increased sensitivity
- Hyperpigmentation
Many women see skin improvements within weeks of reducing inflammatory foods.
Common causes of chronic inflammation in women
Stress – is one of the biggest triggers, and long-term stress increases cortisol, which makes the body more inflamed.
Poor sleep – Sleep is when your body repairs inflammation — lack of rest means your body can’t recover.
Highly processed and high-sugar foods – These spike inflammation, affect hormones, and disrupt metabolism.
Seed oils & fried foods – Many women are sensitive to inflammatory fats.
Alcohol – Even light drinking can spike inflammatory markers.
Missing nutrients – Low magnesium, zinc, omega-3s, and certain B vitamins increase inflammation.
Gut imbalances – An unhealthy gut lining makes the body more reactive.
Hormonal fluctuations – Especially during PMS, postpartum, or menopause.
How to reduce inflammation naturally
- Follow an anti-inflammatory eating pattern
- Support your gut health
- Prioritise sleep like it’s medicine
- Move daily — but not excessively
- Reduce stress in practical ways
- Consider anti-inflammatory supplements
- Listen to your body
Compiled by Amy Steenkamp
First published on Woman and Home
Also see: Women’s health trends for 2026: what will matter most
Feature Image: Gettys