Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

Is Hrt safe?

Speak to any woman in the perils of midlife hormonal changes and you begin to wonder how far we’ve really come. In ancient Greece, one floating theory was women suffered ‘hysteria’ because their empty uterus was in mourning. By the 1700s, physicians thought women’s brains were controlled by their ovaries.

Schlep forward slightly to the Victorian era and ‘climacteric insanity’ was a one-way ticket to an asylum (particularly if you were also partial to a glass or two). And now? Women are still more likely to be offered anxiety or depression medication than hormonal therapy for perimenopausal symptoms. In fact, the stats show that, regardless of what prompts a GP visit, we face higher odds of being diagnosed with a mental health condition than a man, even if we go in with identical physical complaints. It begs the question – is the needle still stuck on hysteria?

In all fairness, we are pretty quick to declare ourselves bonkers when things aren’t ticking along as they used to. “I suddenly felt so anxious about everything,” says mother-oftwo Lucy Brooks, whose periods unexpectedly stopped at age 42.

“I very swiftly went from being active, happy and gung-ho, and managing kids, marriage and my own business, to not being able to cope with anything. My sleep went to pot. I

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ4 min read
Coming Up Roses
This is joy in its purest form: Silky cool and velvety to touch, the billowing Jurlique Rose sits feather light across my cupped palms, a sumptuous burst of pale pink petals that beckons, not just with its beauty, but with its almighty sweet scent. I
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ5 min read
Yes, Menopause Brain Does Exist
Along with sweating and poor sleep often comes something many menopausal women don’t anticipate: Brain fog. Few things are more disconcerting than when your brain feels like mush rather than the sharp and useful tool you’ve been used to, or when your
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ4 min read
From One Mum To Another
I was on my way to pick up my 10-year-old daughter Freya from a birthday party when I received the news I might have cancer. I said to the doctor, “I don’t have time for cancer,” and he said, “Well, you’re going to have to make a bit of time.” I was

Related Books & Audiobooks