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Hot Flashes, Hormones, and Your
Health
By JoAnn E. Manson, M.D.
with Shari S. Bassuk, Sc.D.
What you should know about menopausal hormone
therapy--from the renowned Harvard doctor who
is one of the pioneers conducting the latest
research in the field
What you should know about menopausal hormone
therapy – from the renowned Harvard doctor
who helped to pioneer the latest research
This year, millions of women worldwide will
experience a universal female experience: menopause.
Although some women will sail through the transition
with few problems, three of every four will experience
symptoms due to wide fluctuations of the hormones
estrogen and progesterone. One in four will experience
major symptoms that impair their quality of life. The
most common will be bothersome hot flashes, drenching
night sweats, disturbed sleep, mood swings, vaginal
dryness, concerns about sexuality, and worries
about memory slippages – all of which may
affect a woman’s most important relationships
and her ability to function at home and at work.
Recent studies and media reports on menopausal
hormone therapy (formerly known as hormone replacement
therapy, or HRT) have raised public awareness
and sparked a national debate about the benefits
and side effects of treatment.
Dr. JoAnn Manson, a professor at Harvard Medical
School and author of HOT FLASHES, HORMONES
AND YOUR HEALTH is one of the country’s
leading authorities on menopause and is literally
in the eye of the storm. She was a lead
investigator on two of the largest and most comprehensive
studies on the health of U.S. women to date – the
Harvard Nurses’ Health Study, which has
observationally studied more than 121,000 female
nurses over three decades, to determine the impact
of hormone therapy on a myriad of health outcomes,
and the Women’s Health Initiative, that
studied more than 27,000 women on hormone therapy
or placebo over five-to-seven years.
So how does this translate for you? Dr. Manson
helps you make sense of the latest scientific
evidence and use it to decide what’s best
for you. She believes both the alarmist and uncritically
positive views of menopausal hormone therapy
are both incorrect and harmful to women’s
health. Her crucial “unifying theory” may
help to improve the lives of millions of women.
Among its key points: Hormone therapy tends to
be beneficial when started early after menopause,
and harmful when started late after menopause.
This book will help to demystify the physiological
reasons behind your symptoms, make sense out
of the seemingly contradictory information about
hormone therapy and heart disease and other health
outcomes, and clarify how your own physiological
makeup will help to determine what’s best
for you. In short, this is a unique and indispensable
guide to optimal health during menopause, the
most comprehensive and up-to-date book on hormone
therapy and alternative treatments, written by
a highly respected expert in the field and a
champion of women’s health.
HOT FLASHES, HORMONES, AND YOUR HEALTH answers
your questions about menopause, hormone therapy,
and other treatment options, while providing
a step-by-step, personalized framework for making
the most informed menopausal hormone therapy
decision for your own symptoms and health profile.
It answers the following:
- Which women are now considered good candidates
for hormone therapy and who should avoid it at
all costs?
- How can you calculate your personal risk
for common conditions likely to be affected
by hormone therapy – namely heart disease, stroke,
blood clots in the legs and lungs, breast cancer,
and hip fracture? How should these calculations
guide your decision-making process?
- For women who are good candidates, what is
the best formulation and dose of estrogen to
take, the preferred progestogen, and the optimal
duration of treatment? What’s the truth about “bioidentical” hormones?
- For women who can’t – or prefer
not to – take menopausal hormone therapy,
what are the best options for symptom relief
and general health?
- What is the appropriate role for soy, black
cohosh, and other alternative remedies for
symptom relief and general health?
- How can you work effectively with your healthcare
provider to manage the transition to menopause?
Manson notes that the guidelines in the book
are not intended to replace advice and medical
care provided by your personal physician or healthcare
provider.
Author Biography: JoAnn E. Manson,
M.D., is a professor of medicine and
the Elizabeth F. Brigham Professor of Women's
Health at Harvard Medical School, Chief of
Preventive Medicine at Brigham and Women's
Hospital, and codirector of the Connors Center
for Women's Health and Gender Biology. The
only person to have served as a lead investigator
on two of the most influential studies of women's
health ever conducted — the Women's Health
Initiative and the Harvard Nurses’ Health
Study — Dr. Manson is widely recognized
as one of the world's leading authorities on
women's health. Shari S. Bassuk, Sc.D.,
is an epidemiologist and science writer at
Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston who
frequently collaborates with Dr. Manson.
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