They will take painkillers directly during menstrual dysmenorrhea, instead of drinking brown sugar water and hot compress like women in China. They think that taking painkillers can take effect quickly and relieve the symptoms of dysmenorrhea without affecting their daily lives. People in China have a deep resistance to painkillers, and the most common painkillers in China are anti-inflammatory analgesics. For example, ibuprofen sustained-release capsules and diclofenac sustained-release capsules will have very serious side effects on the human body if taken for a long time, so many women with dysmenorrhea will not choose to take painkillers. Painkillers are essentially western medicines, which come from western countries. Western countries have a higher level of scientific research on western medicine than China. For example, there is still a certain gap between domestic painkillers and imported painkillers. Therefore, the side effects of imported painkillers are relatively small, and the probability of foreign women using painkillers is relatively high.
The living habits of foreign women are quite different from those of women in China. In addition to different eating habits during menstruation, there are also significant differences between pregnancy and childbirth. In foreign women's eyes, there is no food to avoid, no food to eat and no food to eat. If women have the custom of confinement after childbirth, foreign women can go shopping to buy clothes immediately after childbirth, which shows that foreign women are very tough. They can't understand why people in China need confinement. There are still great differences between Chinese medicine culture and western medicine culture. It can only be said that different living environments have developed different living habits.