Overview:
U.S. Senator Angela Alsobrooks convened a roundtable on women's health research to address uterine fibroids, a condition that disproportionately affects women of color. The Uterine Fibroid Intervention and Gynecological Health Treatment Act, or U-FIGHT Act, aims to broaden access to early screening, detection, and treatment for uterine fibroids, while also addressing conditions such as Asherman's syndrome. The chronic underfunding of women's health has left millions to bear their suffering in silence, with only 0.03 percent of research dollars going to studying fibroids.

This post was originally published on Afro
By Ashlee Banks
U.S. Senator Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.) convened a roundtable on women’s health research at the Capitol on Sept. 16, drawing together lawmakers, advocates, and prominent cultural figures to address uterine fibroids, a condition that has long been overlooked in federal research.
The event, titled the “Women’s Health Research Congressional Roundtable,” featured actresses Lupita Nyong’o and Mandy Moore alongside Representatives Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.-7), Robin Kelly (D-Ill.-2), Shontel Brown (D-Ohio-11), and other participants. For nearly ninety minutes, the group discussed the pressing need to expand women’s health research and to advance legislation aimed at addressing fibroids, which disproportionately affect women of color.
Central to the discussion was the Uterine Fibroid Intervention and Gynecological Health Treatment Act, or U-FIGHT Act. Senator Alsobrooks co-authored the legislation with Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-Wy.). If passed, the measure would broaden access to early screening, detection, and treatment for uterine fibroids, while also addressing conditions such as Asherman’s syndrome, which involves scar tissue buildup in the uterus following surgery. It would also require greater attention to disparities in pain management.
Alsobrooks told the AFRO that the chronic underfunding of women’s health has left millions to bear their suffering in silence.
“For far too long, women and girls have suffered from fibroids and we have accepted it as normal,” the Maryland lawmaker stated. “80 percent of women will have fibroids in their life and only 0.03 percent of research dollars go to studying fibroids. Women make up 51 percent of the population, yet only 8 percent of NIH research dollars go to women’s health.”
Rep. Brown, who introduced the House version of the U-FIGHT Act in July, underscored the urgency of passing the measure.
“When you consider that we are 50 percent of the population and the amount of resources that we are lacking when it comes to issues that impact women’s health, I think it is important that we have representatives like Lupita and Mandy Moore at the table to help elevate the importance of this,” Brown told the AFRO.
The Ohio lawmaker added that the economic burden of the current approach makes the case for change.
“We are spending billions of dollars in health care for women to recover or have surgery or all of the things that come with dealing with uterine fibroids, when we could be spending that money toward research and prevention,” Brown added. “So, I am grateful that this is a bicameral piece of legislation now and that we are getting attention from major celebrities to normalize and really bring the conversation to a place where more people will recognize how great the need is.”
Rep. Pressley, who has spoken candidly about her own struggle with fibroids, offered a deeply personal account of the condition’s toll during the roundtable discussion.
“I remember as a city councilor being in hearing sitting atop garbage bags because my blood flow was so heavy from the fibroids that I was carrying and still having to comport myself in a manner that was calm and effective in doing my job,” she told the group.
She continued by describing the stigma surrounding conditions such as fibroids, menopause, and autoimmune diseases.
“The suffering, the shame that we carry for uterine fibroids, for menopause, for autoimmune diseases like alopecia, which I live with,” she added. “We are saying no to the suffering and shame, but yes to research and to change.”
Pressley also warned that recent federal cuts to medical research, coupled with the weakening of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, risk exacerbating long-standing inequities.
“It is possible to legislate healing, it is possible to legislate equity. It is possible to legislate justice, and that is why we are here,” she stated.
Alsobrooks closed the roundtable by thanking Nyong’o and Moore for lending their voices to the cause. She reiterated her commitment to advancing the legislation.
“I hope we can start by passing my bipartisan U-FIGHT Act to end the suffering,” she told the AFRO.
This story was originally published on Word In Black on October 8th, 2025
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