Lauren Wasser was a 24-year-old model from California when an ordinary day turned into the worst kind of nightmare. She went to the hospital with what felt like the flu—fever, aches, exhaustion. Within hours she was in septic shock. Doctors discovered the cause wasn’t influenza at all, but menstrual toxic shock syndrome (mTSS), a rare, fast-moving infection triggered by bacterial toxins. The likely culprit: a tampon she’d been using exactly as instructed.
Lauren slipped into a coma for more than a week. Her organs began to fail. She suffered two heart attacks. When she finally woke, doctors told her they had to amputate her right leg to save her life. She was 24.
“I’d been using the same brand as always, following the directions like every woman does,” she later told Harper’s Bazaar. “That day the toxins took over my body. I had a 42°C fever, my kidneys and organs started failing, and I had a one-percent chance of survival.”
Lauren’s fight didn’t end there. Years later, lingering damage meant she also lost her left leg. In between, she sued the manufacturer of the tampons she’d used and began speaking out about a risk most people barely think about. “The vagina is the most absorbent part of a woman’s body and a gateway to many vital organs,” she wrote in InStyle. “Consumers deserve to know the reality of what can happen.”
The physical losses were only part of the story. Modeling, movement—her whole sense of self—vanished overnight. “My world changed in an instant; I couldn’t even get up, let alone model,” she said. “In my darkest moments, I considered suicide.” What stopped her was a single thought: her little brother coming home from school to find her. That image kept her alive long enough for something else to take root—purpose.
As Lauren learned more, she discovered that mTSS had been killing and disabling women for decades. That realization lit a fire. She made it her mission to make noise: to tell the truth, push for transparency, and ensure no one else suffered in silence. “I should still have my legs,” she says. “No woman should have to risk her life just by using a tampon.”
Healing, for her, was slow and stubborn. She decided that if she had to live with prosthetics, she’d do it on her terms. Inspired by A$AP Rocky’s grills, she had her legs cast in gold—turning survival into style, function into art. “Why not wear gold jewelry all the time?” she joked. Then she went further. Today she runs, hikes with her dog, does Pilates, plays basketball, and even fronted a global lingerie campaign. She laughs that she doesn’t need pedicures anymore—and then adds, without a trace of apology, “There’s nothing I can’t do.”
Lauren’s message is tough and tender at once: own who you are, especially when life tries to tell you otherwise. She’s honest about the bad days and credits her faith for keeping her grounded, but she’s equally clear that it’s okay not to be okay. “Society puts so much pressure on being happy all the time,” she says. “Care a little less about what people think.” In a world obsessed with likes and filters, she reminds us we are already enough.
If you take anything from Lauren’s story, let it be this: awareness saves lives. mTSS is rare but serious, and it can escalate fast. If you or someone you love develops sudden high fever, vomiting, diarrhea, rash, dizziness, or fainting—especially while using a tampon—seek urgent medical care. (Lauren would tell you: trust your gut and don’t wait.)
She has turned unimaginable loss into relentless advocacy—fighting for clearer warnings, safer products, and informed choices. Share her story so more people know the signs, understand the risks, and never dismiss symptoms as “just the flu.”
This brave woman has my full respect. She’s still fighting—not just for herself, but for everyone who shouldn’t have to learn the hard way.