Program to improve menopause support, treatment
Monday, 22 July, 2024
A new program by aims to improve support and treatment for women experiencing serious physical and/or mental symptoms during menopause.
The program is assessing hormone level changes, the impact of menopause and the possible benefits of testosterone treatment for issues like muscle deterioration and early heart failure.
Professor Susan Davis, who heads the Monash University Women鈥檚 Health Research Program in the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, is leading the four studies.
鈥淭he testosterone changes across midlife and the menopause have never been documented with accuracy or precision,鈥 Davis said.
鈥淒espite menopause affecting 51% of the population, these hormone changes at menopause remain uncertain.鈥
Information for care providers and policymakers
Davis, who developed the Practitioner鈥檚 Toolkit for Managing the Menopause, said the Menopause Matters: The Australian Women鈥檚 Midlife Years (AMY) Study will provide critical information for healthcare providers and policymakers.
The project has surveyed more than 8000 women aged 40鈥69 about menopause, their mood and wellbeing, sexual function, and paid and unpaid work. The results will provide information about how women experience menopause today, with the goal of improving women鈥檚 health and wellbeing, but needs more funding for the work to be completed.
鈥淭he findings will have a major socioeconomic impact beyond women鈥檚 health,鈥 Davis said.
鈥淚t will enable workplace policies or amendments pertaining to female workers to be formulated based on sound information, such that outdated perceptions and/or negative social attitudes about menopausal women are not reinforced.
鈥淯ltimately, this study will improve the health and wellbeing of women before, during the menopause transition and beyond, and ensure that they are able to continue to contribute to the community with equity and confidence.鈥
Changing demographics
Davis said Australia鈥檚 demographics had also changed over the past 10 years. 鈥淔or example, we have more women of non-European ancestry and women are delaying childbirth, so more women in their 40s are having children and entering menopause with young/teenage children,鈥 she said.
鈥淰ast numbers of women now spend well over a decade with menopause potentially impacting their work performance and engagement. Australian women constitute almost half of the paid workforce, with a greater number of mature-aged workers (>55 years) compared with the 1960s, when women accounted for only 30% of the total workforce.
鈥淩obust evidence as to how menopausal symptoms influence work performance and engagement is lacking, with the little available data limited to women in paid employment, and no data is available for women in caring and volunteer roles.鈥
Menopause studies
The Menopause Matters: Australian Women鈥檚 Midlife Years (AMY) Study has surveyed 8222 women aged 40鈥69 nationally about their experiences of menopause symptoms, and therapies, and collected blood samples for the precise measurement of hormones by age and menopausal stage. The study hopes to fill critical knowledge gaps about menopause (symptoms, proportion affected, therapy use and impact on women with eating disorders), depression, sexual function, reproductive health and work.
The other studies, which are now recruiting, include: and.
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