This is where it gets personal.
Over the past year, I've spoken with dozens of women in their 70s and 80s across English-speaking countries who've been through the same frustrating cycle:
❌ Compression socks that are "impossible to get on" and "unbearable to wear"
❌ Diuretics that increase bathroom trips but don't remove leg fluid
❌ Elevation that helps temporarily—but swelling returns as soon as you stand
❌ Doctor appointments where they're told "it's just age" or "there's nothing more we can do"
Many women told me they tried everything — socks, pills, creams, massage, supplements, salt reduction — and still woke up swollen every morning.
Helen, 78, told me:
"I tried everything. I spent thousands on private lymphatic massage, special wraps, compression systems. Nothing gave me lasting relief. My legs were getting worse every year."
"Then I found out about pneumatic compression—what they use in hospitals. Within two weeks, my legs looked better than they had in five years."
Another woman, Rita, 76, said:
"My doctor gave me compression socks and told me to elevate my legs. I did that for two years. Nothing changed. Why didn't anyone tell me hospitals use a completely different technology?"
This pattern kept repeating across every country:
Sophisticated, desperate women who'd tried everything—finally finding relief when they gained access to the same technology hospitals use.