From the Journals

Why do we treat menopause as a disease?


 

FROM BMJ

Menopause gets a bad rap in medical literature and throughout society, say authors of a new analysis. And they argue that the negativity undermines women’s health outlook in the years that should be a natural life transition.

Menopause has been medicalized over centuries and talked about as if it were a disease, they say, and that may increase women’s anxiety and apprehension about the midlife stage.

It’s time to change the narrative, says Martha Hickey, MD, with the department of obstetrics and gynaecology at the Royal Women’s Hospital in Victoria, Australia, and her coauthors. Their analysis was published online in the BMJ.

“The message that menopause signals decay and decline, which can potentially be delayed or reversed by hormonal treatments, persists and is reinforced by the media, medical literature, and information for women, often driven by marketing interests,” they write.

Such messages may chip away at women’s confidence. Dr. Hickey and colleagues cite surveys in the United States and Ireland that found that most women (65%-77%) feel unprepared for menopause.

“Together with limited public discussion and education and shame attached to ageing in women, this may contribute to embarrassment and negative expectations about menopause,” the authors write.

The ‘untold misery of oestrogen-starved women’

These messages have deep roots. Take for instance, gynecologist Robert Wilson’s words in his 1966 book “Feminine Forever.” The authors note he recommended estrogen for all menopausal women “to treat their ‘serious, painful and often crippling disease’ and avoid the ‘untold misery of alcoholism, drug addiction, divorce, and broken

homes caused by these unstable, oestrogen-starved women.’ ”

Women experience menopause in very different ways. Experience with menopause also differs by country, the authors explain. “Women’s experience of menopause is also strongly influenced by social values around reproduction and ageing, with positive or negative ramifications,” they write.

“For example, women tend to have worse experiences of menopause in countries where their value is predicated on youth and reproductive capacity and ageing is associated with decline.”

The authors argue that the medicalization of menopause has condensed the wide range of women’s experiences at a typical age into “a narrowly defined disease requiring treatment.”

Promoting exercise, stopping smoking among positive messages

An editorial by Haitham Hamoda, MD, and Sara Moger, with the British Menopause Society, notes that more than 75% of women experiencing menopause report symptoms, and more than 25% describe severe symptoms.

The editorialists point out that the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence and others recommend an individualized approach to addressing menopause that includes a comprehensive approach – advice on exercise, weight management, stopping smoking, and reducing alcohol as well as options such as hormone therapy (HT).

The literature says the main indication for HT is for severe symptoms and not as a preventive measure. “Evidence does not support use of HT to reduce the risk of dementia,” they point out.

While some women may benefit from HT, that should not be explored to the exclusion of other avenues of help, Dr. Hickey and colleagues write. Risks must also be considered.

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