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Menopause
Study Ignites Interest In
New Therapies
By
Anne Rochon Ford - WEnews correspondent

TORONTO (WOMENSENEWS)--A small newsletter published here may offer
some answers and solace to women in menopause and beyond--needed
more than ever as recent news reports revealed a landmark study
will challenge the health benefits of hormone-replacement therapy.
News accounts
about the "International Position Paper on Women's Health and
Menopause: A Comprehensive Approach" that will be released
officially in June by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
in the United States have stunned many. Based on a review of existing
studies and conducted by scientists in five countries, the report
calls into question some of the claims of the benefits of the popular
therapy relating to the prevention of heart disease, Alzheimer's
disease, severe depression, urinary incontinence and broken bones
caused by osteoporosis in postmenopausal women.
The findings
of the landmark report come as no surprise to Janine O'Leary Cobb,
founder of A Friend Indeed, a newsletter about menopause and midlife
that caters to women who wish to be more savvy consumers as concerns
grow about hormone therapy.
For nearly 20
years, the bi-monthly newsletter has advocated a cautious approach
to what Cobb says is a sometimes-overzealous promotion of hormone-replacement
therapy. Cobb is not opposed to the drug regimen, but she believes
that women need to be fully informed about what they put into their
bodies and need to know there are alternative approaches.
The North American
Menopause Society notes that no hard data exist on the number of
women in the United States and Canada who are reaching menopause
or who are post-menopausal. It estimates that roughly 1.3 million
women in the United States reached menopause naturally in the year
2000. An additional 481,000 are estimated to have gone through surgical
menopause (when the ovaries are removed) in that same year, for
a total of more than 1.8 million women. Comparable numbers of women
reached menopause in Canada.
The menopause
society further estimates that approximately 20 percent of women
who reach menopause naturally use hormone-replacement therapy, at
least temporarily. The figure is higher for women who have been
through surgical menopause, since symptoms tend to be more dramatic
following surgery.
You Certainly
Didn't Talk About It If There Was a Man Around
Cobb was a college
professor and mother of five children in Montreal when she found
herself approaching menopause in the early 1980s. Disturbed by signs
and symptoms that were unfamiliar to her, Cobb did what she had
always done in matters of health: She looked for help.
But she was
taken aback when she discovered how little written information was
readily accessible to the public and that much of what was available
claimed that concerns such as fatigue and emotional disturbances
were simply "all in her head." It also angered her that,
in contrast, plenty of material about pregnancy and menstruation
was available.
"About
all there was available to women back then was just good common
sense," Cobb says. "There was advice to be found about
'coddling yourself,' watching what you ate, and spending more time
with your female friends. People were still embarrassed about it
in those days. Women whispered about it . . . you certainly didn't
talk about it if there was a man around.
"It seemed
to be the last bastion of things women could talk about, because
it's so entangled with aging and we just don't want to talk about
getting older," she says.
Cobb decided
to take the problem into her own hands. A trained sociologist, she
did her own research and produced a newsletter that introduced women
to the topic of menopause. She mailed this introductory issue out
to 40 friends and acquaintances.
Scores of letters
poured in. The demand was clear. A Friend Indeed was born.
Newsletter
Covers Home Remedies to Political Hot Potatoes
Referred to
by one writer as "the grandmother of menopause newsletters,"
A Friend Indeed is now approaching its two-decade anniversary. In
that time, Cobb and her newsletter have helped thousands of women
throughout North America and beyond who need thoughtful, practical
advice as they approach this life transition. It boasts a circulation
of 3,000 subscribers--about one-third in the United States and two-thirds
in Canada--and an additional 2,000 are circulated at conferences
and to health practitioners' offices.
Toronto's Dr.
Verna Hunt freely hands out copies of the newsletter to her patients
that might benefit from it. "It provides a forum for women
in their middle years to be heard as well as to learn in a way that
is relevant to their lives, in a way they can understand,"
says Hunt.
Each issue contains
a mix of information and news about menopause and midlife, such
as changing sexuality and the importance of strong immune systems,
but distinguishes itself by the letters readers write.
Women write
firsthand about what they've experienced during menopause, remedies
for side effects that have worked for them--such as progesterone
cream and flaxseed oil to alleviate symptoms such as hot flashes--and
the sense of comfort they get from being able to share the information.
The wealth of experience that has been exchanged over the newsletter's
existence is, in and of itself, a resource beyond qualification,
Cobb says.
Long-time reader
Barbara Mains of Toronto notes: "Janine has been cautioning
women for years about the well-known and lesser-known concerns associated
with hormone-replacement therapy. That isn't to say she is categorically
against it and recognizes that some women benefit greatly over short
periods of use. But she doesn't buy into the popular notion that
almost all menopausal women should be on it for the rest of their
lives."
A Friend Indeed's
most popular issues have tended to be those covering hormone-replacement
therapy and alternative solutions for menopausal symptoms--options
such as increasing exercise, dietary changes and vitamin and herb
supplements. But the newsletter has been ahead of its time in having
covered some topics before they become household words. The subject
of fibromyalgia, a syndrome causing fatigue and extensive pain,
for example, was discussed in depth in a 1991 issue.
Physical health
issues are not its only subject matter. Another popular volume dealt
with the joys of being a grandmother; another at how to communicate
effectively with one's doctor. The newsletter does not shy away
from political hot potatoes either. Recently it explored Canada's
problems in safely regulating prescription drugs.
Newsletter
Now Has Competition
With the vast
array of information now available on menopause, A Friend Indeed
finds itself competing in a radically different environment from
that which it faced at its inception. The Internet is, of course,
its main contender.
Other alternative
sources of information on menopause include books, videos and tapes
by Dr. Christiane Northrup, a practising obstetrician-gynecologist
based in Maine. A popular speaker throughout the United States and
Canada, Northrup's latest book, "The Wisdom of Menopause: Creating
Physical and Emotional Health and Healing During the Change,"
not only provides alternatives to the physical symptoms of menopause,
but offers help for a balanced, spiritual approach to aging and
women's health.
The Washington-based
National Women's Health Network, a non-profit organization that
lobbies for health-promoting policies and information, recently
released its publication, "The Truth About Hormone Replacement
Therapy: How to Break Free From the Medical Myths of Menopause."
The book, available through the network's Web site, offers a balanced
perspective on the risks and benefits of hormone-replacement therapy
and alternative treatments such as herbs and so-called natural hormones.
After devoting
15 years to her "baby," Cobb passed the torch to a new
generation of editors in 1998, the same year she was diagnosed with
breast cancer.
Though friends
had been urging her to "get out of menopause and write more
about old age," Cobb has chosen to spend that kind of energy
helping out with a breast cancer advocacy group in Montreal.
Anne Rochon
Ford is a freelance writer in Toronto specializing in women's health
issues.
For more
information:
A Friend Indeed:
- http://www.afriendindeed.ca
National Women's
Health Network: - http://www.womenshealthnetwork.org/
Dr. Christine
Northrup: - http://www.drnorthrup.com/index.php
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Copyright 2002 Women's Enews. www.womensenews.org
may 2002
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