Hannah Witton
1 title banned
About Hannah Witton
Hannah Lisa Witton is an English author, YouTuber, and broadcaster who built her reputation producing educational content about sex, relationships, and personal health. She grew up in Manchester, England, and attended Loreto Sixth Form College in Hulme before earning a bachelor's degree in History from the University of Birmingham, where she developed a particular interest in sexual history.
YouTube and Media Career
Witton launched her YouTube channel on April 17, 2011. Her early videos focused on sex education and relationships for young women, and her channel steadily grew into one of the UK's most prominent spaces for frank, accessible conversations about topics that rarely receive serious treatment in mainstream media. In November 2016, the BBC named her one of eight Girls' Champions as part of its 100 Women campaign. She won a UK Blog Award in 2017 and was named Vlogger of the Year at the Blogosphere Awards in 2018.
In 2018, Witton was hospitalized for four weeks after a severe flare of ulcerative colitis and underwent an ileostomy. She has spoken openly about the experience and its impact on her understanding of bodies, health, and identity.
Doing It
Witton's debut book, Doing It!: Let's Talk About Sex, was published by Wren & Rook in the UK in April 2017 and in the US in July 2018. The book covers consent, contraception, STIs, LGBTQ+ identities, relationships, and body image in Witton's characteristically direct, non-judgmental style. It won a Summer in the City award in 2017, was translated into German in 2019, and has remained a go-to recommendation for teens seeking honest answers to questions they may not feel comfortable asking adults in their lives.
Her second book, The Hormone Diaries: The Bloody Truth About Our Periods, was published in 2019. Witton also hosted the podcast Doing It with Hannah Witton from 2019 to 2023. In December 2023, she stepped back from sex education content to focus on other projects.
Books by Hannah Witton
Banned in Schools
Books by Hannah Witton have been banned or challenged in 5 states across 7 school districts.