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Managing Your Menopause Type®
Educational Class |
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Session
One - Redefining
Menopause |
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Changing
How We Think of Menopause |
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The way that we think of menopause,
both individually and as a society, has a direct affect on how a woman is
viewed during this stage of her life, and how she is treated by the
healthcare system. The social, medical and cultural definition of menopause
has always determined which therapies are used in management of menopause. In the 1940s through 1960s the
medical community considered menopause as an estrogen deficiency condition. |
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Therapies for women focused on one thing - give
estrogen. This appeared to help some women who probably did have a true
estrogen deficiency. But the limitations and dangers of this "one-size-fits-all" approach would
soon become evident. Some women did very poorly on this "estrogen for
all women" approach to menopause. The effects that estrogen replacement
would have on progesterone and testosterone and other hormones were not
considered. The long-term risk for cancer was not openly discussed (papers
linking estrogen to cancer were already published). Estrogen was heavily
marketed as the hormone for all women. The one-size-fits-all approach had been heavily associated with
menopause - a great misfortune that would continue to plague woman's health
care for decades. The estrogens that were prescribed were, for the most part,
estrogens that do not occur naturally in the human body. They were foreign
estrogens - or xenoestrogens. |
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In the 1970s & 1980s we came face to face with
the reality that estrogen replacement increased the risk of endometrial
cancer. We began to truly understand the consequences of unopposed estrogen
(estrogen not balanced by progesterone). The one-size-fits-all model was quickly updated to "give a progestogen when prescribing estrogen". (A progestogen is a molecule that has some of the actions or
progesterone.) The menopause market was revitalized by this new approach
estrogen progestogen combinations were heavily
marketed as the one-size-fits-all.
Like estrogens, the progestogens that were prescribed were mostly synthetic, and not progestogens that occur naturally in
the human body. The new estrogen & progestogen combination did have true merit, but
society could not get past the fact that the previous one-size-fits-all had major flaws. Medical dogma was being openly
questioned. The shroud that hid medical and scientific research from the
public had been ripped away. Economic and social forces were changing the
very practice of medicine. Our understanding of menopause was about to change. |
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In the 1990s and into the end of the century the
management of menopause continued to evolve. As public access to medical
information increased, and the women's healthcare movement continued to grow,
other models of menopause emerged. The Internet strengthened the self-care
movement, and conventional models of menopause management were openly
challenged in both the medical community and society at large. Books on
menopause began to enter the popular market, breaking the "last taboo''
and bringing conversations about menopause out into the open. |
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The most dominant definition of menopause in the
medical community continued to be that menopause is an estrogen deficiency
that also needs a progestogen for endometrial
protection. Thus the most widely used one-size-fits-all
approach was to give women an estrogen with a progestogen. |
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The fact that women could be deficient in testosterone
was beginning to be recognized. The one-size-fits-all model was beginning to
erode. |
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In the mid- to late 1990s public awareness of a
progesterone deficiency in women of menopause age was beginning to be
recognized. There was a progesterone replacement therapy movement that was
heavily fueled by the marketing and selling of progesterone. Promoters of
progesterone replacement therapy did not discuss the side effects and risks
of progesterone replacement therapy. A progesterone
only philosophy evolved, and women were
encouraged to ignore estrogens and testosterone. The one-size-fits-all model, which had proved to be an effective
marketing strategy for estrogen was now being used to sell progesterone. |
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As the century ended menopause was still heavily
influences by the one-size-fits-all
model. Various marketing camps had emerged; each convinced that they had the one-size-fits-all model that all
women needed. The medical community was still trying to clearly define what
menopause was - not fully aware that there are different types of menopause. |
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What
this means to you |
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Understanding that menopause cannot be managed by a
one-size-fits-all approach is the first
step to finding out your unique needs. Identifying, and planning for your
unique needs is covered in upcoming sessions. The
Managing Your Menopause Type® Educational Class will have two major goals
running as themes through the class: Understanding that menopause cannot be
managed by a one-size-fits-all
approach is the first step to finding out your unique needs. Identifying, and
planning for your unique needs is covered in
upcoming sessions. The Managing Your Menopause Type® Educational
Class will have two major goals running as themes through the class: |
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The first major theme is the goal of enhancing the quality of your life by
managing symptoms associated with menopause. Quality of life will be
introduced in session two. |
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The second major theme is to decrease the risk of diseases associated with menopause such as
osteoporosis, heart disease and other chronic diseases. Risks of diseases
will be introduced in session three. |
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Healthcare
Professionals trained in the Management of Menopause Types®
will assist you in enhancing the
quality of your life and decreasing the risk of diseases. Use our search page
to Find a
Healthcare Professional who is Menopause Type® Certified. |
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What's
Next? |
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We will now present the new definition of
menopause, and introduce the menopause types®. |
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The Managing Your Menopause Type®
Educational Class is provided to the public without charge. This information
is provided for educational purposes only, and is not intended to prescribe
treatment. Consult a physician, pharmacist or other healthcare professional
regarding the applicability of any opinions or recommendations with respect
to your symptoms or medical condition. |
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This public education class does not provide
physicians, pharmacists or other healthcare professional with the extensive training
and ongoing education provided within the Management of Menopause Type®
Program. |
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The extensive Professional Management of Menopause
Type® Seminar is available to healthcare professionals as a
component of the Management
of Menopause Types® Program. |
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Menopause Type® is a Registered
Trademark of YourMenopauseType.com. |
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© YourMenopauseType.com. |
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YourMenopauseType.com, Inc. |
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