Endometriosis Support in Cork City: A Natural Approach to a Complex Condition
Living with endometriosis in Ireland, or anywhere, often means navigating a system that isn’t set up to support you well.
Long waits with limited specialist access. Treatment options that manage symptoms without addressing the underlying picture. And increasingly, women making the difficult decision to travel abroad for the surgical care they cannot access here.
If this is your experience, or that of someone you love, you are not imagining the gap. And you are not out of options.
At The Natural Clinic in Cork city, Louise Kane Buckley — naturopath, nutritional therapist and biodynamic craniosacral therapist — works with women navigating endometriosis using an integrative whole body approach. One that looks at the full picture: inflammation, hormonal balance, gut health, nervous system regulation and the emotional reality of living with chronic, often invisible pain. You can find Louise’s full profile and availability at The Natural Clinic here.
Why a natural approach makes sense for endometriosis
Endometriosis is an inflammatory, oestrogen-dependent condition. Both of those drivers -inflammation and oestrogen – are meaningfully influenced by what we eat, how we manage stress, how our gut is functioning, and what our nervous system is doing day to day.
Research supports the use of omega-3 fatty acids, curcumin, magnesium, B vitamins and antioxidants in reducing pain and inflammation associated with endometriosis. Herbal support — including wild yam, vitex and ashwagandha — has a long tradition of use in hormonal conditions, with growing scientific interest to support it.
EFT and craniosacral therapy address the nervous system and pain dimensions that nutritional support alone cannot reach. And for localised pain relief, therapeutic products that Louise makes and sells at the clinic, such as magnesium oil and Wild Yam Balm offer practical, daily support between sessions.
Working with Louise
Louise is based here at The Natural Clinic in Cork city and works with women at all stages — newly diagnosed, long-suffering, post-surgical, or still without a formal diagnosis but certain that something is wrong.
The starting point is always a foundational session: a thorough, unhurried conversation about where you are, what you’ve tried, and where the clearest opportunities for support lie.
Spring is often when women feel most ready to take that step. If that’s you, Louise is here, you can enquire about availability and book directly through her page at The Natural Clinic: https://thenaturalclinic.ie/