The Mel Robbins Podcast - The Menopause Manifesto: #1 Ob/Gyn Shares the Truth About Hormones for Vitality, Energy, & Strength
Episode Date: May 9, 2024Today, a top menopause doctor is here to give you the science and facts on menopause and hormone replacement therapy that your doctor isn’t telling you.This episode is a must listen because you’ll... learn EXACTLY what to do to feel like yourself again.Dr. Jen Gunter, MD, is known as the internet’s best Ob/Gyn. She is a double board-certified, fellowship-trained medical doctor and a fierce advocate for women’s health. She says you deserve science-backed solutions, not fairytales, and she is here to bust through all menopause myths and clear through the misinformation.You’ll learn:- The best intervention for menopause symptoms to help you lose weight, sleep better, and stop suffering now.- Should you or a loved one be on hormone replacement therapy (HRT)?- Which form of HRT is best?- Are “bioidentical hormones” better?After today, you will know how to hack your hormones and get your mojo back. Bookmark this episode and share it with every single woman in your life, because it’s time to change the paradigm: you do not have to live with symptoms that can be resolved, and you do not have to suffer.For more resources, including links to Dr. Gunter’s research, website, and social media click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this research-packed episode, you’ll love our first episode about menopause with Dr. Mary Claire Haver, MD: The #1 Menopause Doctor: How to Lose Belly Fat, Sleep Better, & Stop Suffering Now.Connect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s newsletter Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
I am so happy you chose to listen to today's episode.
It's going to make you feel completely seen and understood
because our expert is the extraordinary Dr.
Jen Gunter. She is the number one OBGYN
that people turn to for trusted science-backed advice regarding
menopause.
And she is here to bust the myths and clear through the misinformation, and it is so prevalent
on the topic of menopause.
In fact, Dr. Gunter is so in demand that I've been waiting a year to have this conversation
with her.
She has jumped on a plane, flown across country to be here for you, to set the record straight
and to answer your questions.
Are my symptoms normal?
Is hormone replacement therapy safe?
What exactly are bioidentical hormones
and are they better than normal ones?
What are compounded hormones?
How do I talk to my doctor and my family about this?
Today, you are getting the exact specific protocol you need
from one of the most respected experts
in women's health on the planet.
And if menopause is not impacting you personally,
do not change this episode, do not touch that dial
because it is impacting someone you love.
And simply listening and learning
is gonna help you love them even better.
Because today we are busting the myths and you are getting the facts
about menopause.
Hey it's Mel. I am so thrilled to bring this episode and conversation to you
today. Dr. Jen Gunter is here to tell you everything you need to know about menopause, with a very particular focus on exactly what
to do in order to feel better.
Now, Dr. Gunter has been called the internet's favorite OB-GYN.
She is a double board certified fellowship trained medical doctor, and she is a fierce
advocate for women's health.
She is also the bestselling author
of three international bestsellers,
including the Menopause Manifesto
and her latest bestseller, Blood.
She's known for myth-busting and no-nonsense facts,
and you are going to love this conversation with her today.
And I wanna remind you, this is not just for you.
Please be generous and share this
with every single woman that you know,
because what you're about to hear
will change her life and yours.
Without further ado, please help me welcome Dr. Jenn Gunter
to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I am so glad to be here.
So Dr. Gunter, thank you so much for jumping on a plane, flying all the way across country
to be here with us in Boston.
I cannot wait to jump in and talk about menopause, bust the myths, have you empower us.
I want to start by having you speak directly to the person who's listening, who is either
about to hit menopause, going through menopause, or maybe they're listening to this episode
because somebody that they love has sent it to them.
Could you talk to the person listening
about what they are going to experience
and what they're gonna learn and how they're gonna feel
after they're done learning from you today?
Yeah, so I want you to feel seen
if you're going through the menopause transition.
I think so often women are made to feel small and they're not important.
And women are uniquely affected by ageism.
So you kind of have the double whammy at this time.
So I'm hoping that you'll feel that your concerns are valid and they're important.
And there are lots of options to do
from a health standpoint.
And there are many ways to take care of yourself.
And I can give you some tools to reframe
what's going on with your body,
so you kind of know where you are,
and also give you tools to find help if you're struggling.
What do you want to say to women who are in menopause?
Yeah, team menopause, I'm on it too.
So I would say that menopause is a normal part
of the ovulatory cycles that we have.
And just like you went through puberty,
which might have been challenging and had some symptoms
and caused a lot of physical changes through your body,
that menopause is in many ways the same thing.
You can think about it as puberty in reverse.
It is not a sign that your body is going to fall apart the next day. It is not some new experience.
I know there's a lot of people out there who think that, oh, because women are living longer
now they're just experiencing menopause, but that's not true. The ancient Greeks knew that
the average age was about 50, which is about what it is now. And if we erase menopause,
then we erase all the grandmothers in history, right?
So that it is a normal experience,
but normal doesn't have to mean pleasant, right?
So just like when you went through puberty,
maybe you got acne,
or maybe you had really heavy regular periods,
or pregnancy, also a normal experience.
Maybe you had terrible nausea and vomiting.
Maybe you had other complications.
So normal things can have complications.
And I would say that there are things about menopause that can be very unpleasant for
people. There's things that can be very liberating. People who've had terrible painful periods
who now don't have them think it's amazing. People who've had maybe terrible PMS find
that the steady, the lack of ups and downs of hormones are liberating. And so I would say that if you're suffering, there is often medical treatment for that.
And that the best way to know how to make it a more pleasant experience or less onerous
experience, depending on the spectrum you're on, is to get informed and have accurate information.
I've never heard anybody call it puberty in reverse. That actually makes a lot of sense.
Yeah, well, just like you're, you know, it's a different physiologic process, but you know,
you have a winding up, right? So when you go through puberty, you don't start and bang
on, have cycles regular, you they sort of start and stop, they might be heavy, they
you know, have that have that sort of like flirting with it, if you will. Well, you have
that same and kind of the last couple of years, you have the starting and stopping with the
periods, you're having the winding
down of ovulation.
And so, yeah, so they're like bookends, a little bit different, you know,
maybe like sisters, not twins.
I don't know.
What is happening to the body when you're going through menopause?
So, menopause, the menopause transition, which is the time leading up to menopause
that, you know, you might also think of heard called perimenopause or premenopause.
How long does that last?
Well, anywhere kind of from sort of four to 10 years, depending.
Just kind of like puberty, right?
Like a big range and how long it can last.
Some people seem to have these late growth spurts, goes on forever.
Some people relatively short.
Kind of the same thing.
Oh, wait a minute.
Okay.
So, when you were talking about puberty,
I was just thinking about getting my period.
I wasn't thinking about all the other things that happened,
like your breasts coming in, your body shape changing,
the fact that you grow taller.
Do we shrink when we're going through menopause?
Not really. Certainly if you develop osteoporosis, you can,
but no, otherwise not. And it would be rare to develop
osteoporosis in your late 40s or early 50s. That would be
really a sign that you should be something else going on
significant. But over time, if you have osteoporosis, you
certainly can lose height, and we want to protect that. But over time, if you have osteoporosis, you certainly can lose height, and we want to protect that. But
yeah, puberty is a many years experience, right? You start to
get pubic hair, you start to grow, you get breast buds, your
body shape changes, you know, you may have mood swings, you
may have acne, you sort of this whole experience. And just like
puberty might have ended at a different time
for different people, some people stopped growing
in grade seven, I was still growing in grade 10,
grade 11, right, you have this big range,
it's the same thing with the menopause transition.
And so I just encourage people to think about it more
that way, that it is a change, and these changes
don't happen overnight.
So it's this physiologic change, and it's related to the decrease in the number of follicles
or eggs that can ovulate.
And so what happens sort of in response to the decreasing levels of estrogen that are
produced, you get other hormonal changes, your brain is trying harder to get the ovaries
to ovulate, they
can start to get discoordinated, so you might get one ovulation right on top of each other.
So some cycles you might have higher estrogen levels than normal. Some cycles you may not
have progesterone. Some cycles might be shorter. Some you might develop estrogen, not get progesterone,
but still menstruate. So it's basically hormonal chaos.
And so it's people mistakenly think of it as sort of this gradual smooth transition,
but it's more like, but obviously there's variation.
My best friend had regular cycles, and then her period stopped and she had one hot flash.
And I'm like, that's kind of the equivalent of showing up as a unicorn.
Well, that's like showing up in the hospital and you're like, oh, I feel a little contractions
and you're like nine centimeters and go, oh, the baby comes out.
Right?
Like there's, you know, there are people who have those experiences and then there's people
who have, you know, 72 hour labors.
Right?
So, so yeah, so it's this wide experience and there are many things that can affect
it.
Dr. Gunter, what are the biggest myths of menopause?
Well, oh gosh are the biggest myths of menopause?
Well, oh gosh, the biggest myth. I would say the biggest myth is that your life is over,
that this is the end. Once you age out of being a breeder, for lack of a better term, you've lost value. But I would say that many women, once the menopause transition is over, really describe that they
have a greater clarity and they feel great and maybe it's not having the hormonal fluctuations.
Maybe it's the fact they just don't care anymore because they're older, it's wisdom with age.
I don't know the answer to that.
Maybe it's the fact that all of the part of your brain that was tied up with ovulation
is now gone because your brain prunes pathways. It doesn't need anymore. I mean, I don't know the answer.
But I would say that, you know, for some people it can be very rocky and for some people it isn't.
And for people who it's very rocky, we have treatment.
That's true. You know, I think the biggest myth, if I'm kind of just thinking about what my friends are talking about is that You're going crazy and
It feels very liberating when a doctor tells you oh that brain fog
That can be explained by menopause. Oh, you know frozen shoulder that can be explained by menopause and so
Understanding that there's an underlying reason for all of these things suddenly coalescing for me
has been the biggest, most liberating thing is to kind of understand what's going on instead
of feeling like I'm a victim to what's going on.
Yeah, I think education about how your body works is very liberating. So then you don't
think that you're uniquely broken or uniquely crazy or something, you know, that, you know,
what is specific, you know, what is specific,
you know, why is my body behaving this way and no one else's?
And you're like, oh, lots of people are behaving this way, okay, I don't feel so alone.
So sometimes there's kind of safety or comfort in numbers.
What are the top three non-hormone interventions that you recommend all women do to impact
their health?
Well, I would say the top recommendation is exercise.
I would put that over hormones, absolutely. But in menopause in particular, how come? Well, exercise touches almost every single
domain that is affected by menopause. So if you think that menopause can start to change the
trajectory for, you know, risk of osteoporosis and risk of dementia, risk of muscle loss, all of these
things, exercise touches all of those domains.
So in the menopause transition,
there's an increased risk of depression.
Exercises can treat depression.
Exercise can help protect bone mass.
Exercise can help build muscle strength, build muscle mass.
Exercise is great for your heart.
It's great for your brain.
Basically, exercise treats almost everything in
menopause except the hot flashes and vaginal dryness.
I mean, and we have great medications for those.
So, what I'm saying is that, you know, going into menopause with that strong foundation,
and it's not just, you know, cardio resistance training.
Exercise helps with your balance so you're less likely to fall.
I mean, the number one risk factor for breaking a bone is actually falling, right?
So, you know, so all of these
things can be protected with exercise, but that's not a sexy sell.
That's true.
Like if you could only ever do one thing for your health, it would be to get your exercise.
I mean, you don't want to play favorites and say, well, you can only do one thing, but
you know, you get what I mean. I'm just trying to emphasize how important exercise is and
resistance training and building muscle.
And I'm always inspired by all these women in their 50s,
60s, and 70s on Instagram that are showing,
like they're flexing and their backs are just,
they're just like cut and I'm just like, oh yeah.
Never too late?
Yeah. Well, I'm working on it.
So, so yeah, so I exercise eating,
you know, 25 grams of fiber a day,
trying to have, you know, more protein, many 25 grams of fiber a day, trying to have more protein.
Many women don't eat enough protein
and trying to have more plant-based protein in your diet
and having more vegetables.
I mean, it's not the sexy stuff, but it's the stuff.
And then obviously not smoking.
I just love how you explain this stuff.
What is hormone replacement therapy?
So, menopausal hormone therapy, which is what we call it,
is giving hormones to treat symptoms, menopausal hormone therapy, which is what we call it, is giving
hormones to treat symptoms of menopause or to prevent complications associated
with menopause like osteoporosis. Can you explain the different types of hormone
replacement therapies, Dr. Gunter? Yeah, so there's evidence-based, FDA-approved,
and then there are scams. I would think that's the best way to sort it out. So, many people get hung up on the term bioidentical, which is really a meaningless term.
It's a medically meaningless term. Whether a hormone is the same or similar to what your body
makes doesn't make it safe. I could give you a high amount of epinephrine and, you know, cause
harm to you, but that's something your body makes. So I can give somebody tons of estrogen
and give them endometrial cancer.
So whether something's similar to what your body makes
or not doesn't make it safe.
What makes it safe is is it studied, is it safe,
is it effective, and is it something that can be,
we know exactly how much you're getting.
So one of the big problems is a lot of people
are using compounded medications or pellets.
And we don't know what's actually in those things
from an actual amount of hormones.
So if I give you an estrogen patch,
I know how much is gonna be absorbed.
There have been studies that have been done.
I know if you put it on a different body part
that's gonna affect absorption.
So all of this has been done. With compounded products, none of that exists. None of it.
I don't know how much is getting across your skin. I don't know how much you're ingesting.
I don't know how much is being absorbed. You would want to know what you're putting into your body, right?
So I would say there are FDA approved therapies and there are many good ones out there. So there are, you know, there's estradiol,
which is the main hormone that the ovary makes
and we have pharmaceutical variations of those.
Another big myth is that some hormones are plant-based
and you know, that again is a marketing jargon.
Is that not true?
Well, I mean, petroleum's plant-based too
if you wanna look at it that way, right?
So yeah, it's plant-based, but it's not.
You know, they used a starting chemical found in a plant and converted it into estradiol.
That doesn't make it any better than if I made estradiol by assembling it from different
molecules.
It's the same thing. Your body can't tell the difference.
We just make it from soybeans,
which is called a semi-synthesis,
because it's cheaper than making it by synthesis,
which is assembling the molecules itself.
So it's a total marketing thing.
Plant-based, it means nothing.
Nobody's grinding up yams and putting them into pills
and giving them to you.
How do I know that I'm doing the right thing?
Like I listen to you and I'm like, yes, yes, yes.
I love it.
Take it down, take it down.
Go, go, go, Dr. Gunter.
Thank God you're out there cleaning up the internet for us.
But then I'm like, shit, what am I asking my doctor? Like, so if I'm going into my gynecologist
and I'm interested in hormone replacement therapy, what is the proper thing to ask for
so that I am in the land of research and in the land of things that we can measure versus
in the kind of fringe areas of the other stuff.
So if you're getting a prescription
that doesn't have a package insert with it.
What does a package insert mean?
Whenever you get any prescription
and there's this little folded up book and you unfold it,
it's like all the risks and benefits
and it's like this big thing.
If it doesn't have that, then it's not FDA approved.
Oh. Okay.
So all the things that you get from the compound pharmacy, not FDA-approved,
because they haven't, like, how could they be? Because the packaging has been through
clinical trial after clinical trial, and it's had to have been tested and passed through all these
hoops for your safety and so that you as a doctor can understand what you're actually prescribing
me. Yeah, so there's this whole sort of loophole for compounded medications,
and so they don't have to have that package insert.
They don't have to tell you about risks of blood quats or risks of this.
They don't have to tell you any of that.
So that's a big problem, and it makes people think that they're safer.
Because look, if I gave you two things, one had a list that said it had a black box warning on it,
and the other one didn't, you're going to automatically think the one that doesn't have the black box warning on is safer.
Well, it doesn't have the black box warning because it wasn't required because it's not
FDA approved.
Oh my God.
You know, when I was going through perimenopause, I got bioidentical hormones from a compound
pharmacy and I thought I was fancy.
I thought this is like high-end medicine.
They have taken something from me.
This is how uninformed I was.
They have literally, because of the word bioidentical,
I thought it meant, oh, well somehow this is custom
formulated for me to match my hormones.
It is bioidentical, which sounds really fancy
and trustworthy.
And then I would get this packet from a compound pharmacy and it would have these like tubes in it.
And there were all these warnings like, don't expose to light, don't do this, do that.
Now, did I follow those? Of course not.
Was I precise in how much I would squirt on my wrist? No, if I'm being honest.
No, if I'm being honest. And so I thought that I was having the better result when I can see now what you're basically
saying is that, no, not really.
You were having the inferior.
You were paying more and getting less.
Because we all think when someone's customizing something for us that we're getting better,
we're trustworthy, we believe people. And no
menopause society recommends compounded hormones. They're not recommended by the North American,
or we now call them, they're now called the menopause society. The National Academies for
Science, Medicine, and Engineering don't recommend compounded hormones. The International Menopause
Society, the British Menopause Society, none of them recommend compounded hormones, because it takes science and
research to know how to get hormones through a skin. It
takes science and research to know how to get them from your
gut into your bloodstream. When you make hormones, they just get
dumped into your bloodstream from your body. You're not
eating them, you're not absorbing them, you're not
rubbing them on your skin. You didn't evolve to get hormones
that way. Now, it doesn't evolve to get hormones that way.
Now, it doesn't matter that we have modern medicine for a reason, so it doesn't mean you
shouldn't take them because we didn't evolve for that. But funny thing, it takes science to figure
out how to make these molecules work for us. And so there are several issues with using compounded
products. People may be getting more of a hormone than they
think they're getting. So, you might be getting more estrogen than you need, which could put
you at risk for endometrial cancer. You might be getting not enough progesterone, which
would put you at risk for endometrial cancer. Or you might not be getting enough estrogen
putting you at risk for osteoporosis. So, you think that you're preventing osteoporosis,
but you're not. So, this is the analogy I use. Using FDA approved hormones is like going to the gas station
that has the gallons on it,
and you can choose whichever gas you want.
You fill your car and you have a working gas gauge,
and you're like, I know what's in there,
and that's important.
Going to getting these compounded formulations or pellets
is like buying gas from a dude on the side of the road
who's telling you he has bespoke a gas for you
and let him fill your tank.
And oh, he's gonna flip that switch off
so you don't know how much is in there
because you should trust him because he knows.
That's the difference.
I am speechless.
Like it's not very often that I don't have anything to say.
And you just took a flame thrower to the entire idea of bioidentical hormones.
I would never, ever try it again.
And then I would add on top, by the way, you've brought the science and the research and a
very compelling analogy.
I'm going to add one more.
As somebody who already has ADHD
and has increased brain fog due to menopause,
I am not that great at being consistent,
at storing things the right way or using it the right way.
And so I'm probably over or under dosing,
even if it was made in a way that was clinically sound.
And so case closed, not doing bioidentical hormones.
Yeah, and I would say move away from using bioidentical
and just call them compounded.
Because bioidentical doesn't mean anything.
So bioidentical is a marketing term used
to describe hormones that are plant-based, that are identical to what your body makes.
But estradiol that you get from an FDA-approved company, you know, I use an estrogen patch,
it's estradiol.
I've got it on right now.
The estradiol in the patch is no different from the estradiol the compounding pharmacy
is using.
They're both buying the raw hormone from the same place. The difference is the
pharmaceutical company has studied how to give that estradiol to you in a
reliable dosing manner. The compounding pharmacy has not done that work. They
don't have that. And because of that, they're not FDA approved,
because you have to show to the FDA.
And it's expensive.
You have to do all those kinds of things.
So they haven't submitted that data.
They're just making things up.
So you have a precise studied formulation.
But the big thing is they're not buying fancier hormones.
All the raw hormone comes from the same one or two
plants in the world. It's like me buying Cheerios and putting them in a Cheerio
box or putting them in a glass jar with a ribbon around, but they're the same
product except the delivery mechanism is different.
So that's why I tell people, you know, every estrogen that I would prescribe you from an
FDA-approved source, with the exception of Premrin, is bioidentical.
And so bioidentical.
So everything is the same.
Just forget that word.
Okay.
Yeah, because the, so when people use the word bioidentical, it tells me that they think women are dumb.
Well, clearly I am in this area.
Well, no, seriously, I can own it because here's the thing,
it is confusing as hell.
And there's so much misinformation.
And when you walk into the doctor's office
and you are simultaneously erupting at your family
because you're all over the place with your emotions
I'm speaking for myself here and then next thing you know, you're sweating like Niagara Falls
And then next thing, you know, your vagina feels like the Sahara Desert and next thing
You know
You can't remember where your car keys are or where you put your dog because you can't remember like and you are
Losing your mind and somebody says to you Oh bio, bioidentical and I can send you out.
You're like, thank you, I'll take it, whatever.
And so I had no idea.
Yeah, and I used it for three years
and I thought I had the fancy thing.
And so I want to be very clear about something
and you listen keenly to me, Dr. Gunter,
to make sure I have this correct
because I'm putting my lawyer hat on
and I'm feeling the association of compounding pharmacists
writing us a C and a C letter.
And so I wanna be very clear about what she has said.
Number one, it is a fact that the menopause society
does not recommend that you use a compound delivery formula
for any kind of hormone replacement therapy because
it has not gone through FDA approval. And number two, the distinction that we're
talking about is not the actual hormone. Okay, so they're using the same stuff. The
reason why it is important that you understand this is because the delivery mechanism of the pharmaceutical
product like Estradil has gone through FDA approval, which means the researchers and
scientists and doctors know how your body's going to absorb it. They know the rate of
delivery. They know that it has been tested. and so it is what the menopause society is
recommending if you are going to do hormone replacement therapy.
Did I get that right?
Yeah.
And so, you know, there are, the other important thing is when you have an FDA approved medication,
they're batch tested.
So what that means is, whatever, however many, one bottle in 50, one bottle in, I don't know what it is, is tested to make sure it has what it claims.
But when you're mixing up product after product one at a time, there's no batch testing that can be done.
Right. So the quality, you're talking about a whole different thing in quality control.
Right. So the only time we ever recommend a compounded product is if there is a true allergy.
There's no pharmaceutical option because of a true allergy.
And that's where we rely on compounding pharmacies
for that situation.
So one example might be Prometrium, oral progesterone.
The brand in the United States is made with peanut oil.
So if you have a peanut allergy,
you can't take that product.
So the options are then to take a different pharmaceutical
or to get progesterone compounded by a compounding pharmacy
without peanut oil.
That makes sense.
So in that instance, where you have a real allergy, you might recommend a compound pharmacy.
But otherwise, 100 percent, as literally the number one gynecologist myth busting, you are out there setting the medical facts straight.
The Menopause Society and your medical recommendation is to absolutely not be using the compounding formulas, but
to be using the FDA approved delivery mechanisms that are prescribed by your OB-GYN.
Right.
I am learning so much, and I know you are too, and we need to take a quick break to
hear a word from our sponsors.
And while you listen to the amazing sponsors, would you please share this episode with someone
who needs to hear it, which is basically every single woman in your life.
And don't you dare go anywhere, because when we come back,
we are gonna keep talking about exactly what you can do
to relieve the symptoms of menopause.
We have so much more to learn
from the amazing Dr. Jen Gunter.
And later on, we're gonna talk about exactly how
you can talk to your doctor
in order to get the care that you need.
All right, stay with us. We'll be right back.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins, and I am here with the incredible, myth-busting and unbelievably empowering Dr. Jen Gunter.
She is telling you everything that you need to know about menopause.
So, Dr. Gunter, how do I know that I'm doing the right thing?
What people need to remember, the takeaway is, there's really very few things you need
to know about hormones.
The two main estrogens that we recommend are either
estradiol, and if you're stuck on the term bioidentical, that is bioidentical. Now, I'd
like people to throw that term away, but sometimes it's hard. So the estradiol that I would give
you in a patch or a pill from a pharmaceutical company, that is bioidentical, right? So you
have that. So you want to learn estradiol and then you want to learn primrin, which is conjugated equine estrogens. And that's only actual natural
estrogen because it comes from horse urine.
Horse urine?
Yeah. Natural means the substance exists in nature and it's
being used unchanged.
How the hell did they figure out that horse urine is something that...
Yeah, horse urine's got all kinds of estrogens in it. It's a crazy thing.
So those are the two things you need to learn.
You need to learn estradiol and you need to learn Premarin,
which is the trade name for conjugated equine estrogens.
And then you need to learn oral or transvaginal
or transdermal.
So against the skin, through the vagina or by mouth.
Gotcha.
And we recommend the number one starting treatment
we generally recommend is transdermal estradiol.
Here, I'll show you.
I'm gonna show you mine right now.
Cause I'm probably due to take it off.
I have to do it like every four days.
Ooh, look, I wore black underwear.
Let me get down here.
Okay, you guys will never watch YouTube again.
Okay, here it is.
So this is, and look, my dead skin is on it.
That's disgusting. Yeah, so you have a patch, yeah. Yeah, so I have a patch. I'm gonna hold it up right there.
Yeah. I have to replace it every four days, change my life. And so I can trust
knowing that if I put this on every four days, and this is considered transdermal.
That's transdermal. It goes through the scan. So if you're like, I wouldn't put it
here obviously, but you don't want to stick it to yourself. Yeah, but you only want to
put it in the place
that the package insert says.
Because it's been studied,
they've studied it in different locations
that the absorption can change.
So if you put it on your belly versus putting it on your thigh
or putting on your butt,
you might get a different absorption
of the amount of estrogen and you don't want that.
You want to know what you're getting.
Yeah, that's right.
And you know, I've also learned,
cause I had no idea,
that you could also insert something
into the vagina for hormone replacement therapy.
Yeah.
I should probably button my pants to finish the interview.
Yeah, so there is a transvaginal ring that also has estrogen
and can be absorbed that way into the body.
And there's also a ring where the estrogen just
stays in the vagina. And if you're having vaginal dryness, you have urinary tract infections, pain with sex,
vaginal estrogen can be very effective for that.
And so some people who have no other symptoms of menopause feel great, they feel fine,
but they have vaginal dryness. They don't want to take a medication that goes throughout their body.
They want to just use a vaginal estrogen. So we have that. That's
a great option. When you're using estrogen that goes through your body, about 50% of
people will get a good level in their vagina, but some people won't. But from a take-home
standpoint, there is absorbing through the skin or through the vagina, and there is taking
it by mouth. And we believe that absorbing it through the skin
has the lower risk of blood clots.
So that's why what people need to learn
is the first line therapy for menopause
is transdermal estradiol.
You mentioned pellets a couple of times.
What are those?
So pellets are implants that you go to a medical doctor
or a nurse practitioner.
And I think maybe even in some places there's naturopaths who
insert them. I don't really know because I'm not really involved
with it. Maybe they don't. I'm not sure. And they can either
have estrogen. They can have estrogen and testosterone. Maybe
they have other hormones and I don't really know. And they're
made in compounding pharmacies and they're implanted. They're
not batch tested so you don't know how much hormone you're getting.
And it's, my understanding of it is it's based on a proprietary system.
So you get your blood drawn, they follow your hormone levels, and then they decide when
you get the next pellet based on that.
But we don't recommend hormone levels for, you know, for giving hormone therapy.
It's not based on levels, it's based on symptoms.
I don't need to know what your estrogen level is
if you're 47 and starting it.
I don't even need to know what your estrogen level is
when you're 42, I only need to know that
if I'm worried that you have premature menopause, right?
So this sort of system, and it's just, it's not recommended.
There've also been issues with pellets,
with complications and side effects
not being reported to the FDA,
which is also another concern. So, we don't actually know how many people have problems versus
pharmaceutical companies when they get adverse events reported, those are passed on to the FDA
because there's big penalties, my understanding, for not doing that. So...
AMT – So, is the pellet a delivery mechanism?
DR. KELLEY – Yeah. So, it's an implant that sits in the body.
Because I don't do it, I don't really know much about it,
because it's not recommended.
I don't know that much about it.
But what can happen is it can produce very, very high levels
of hormones, and then it drops off.
And in some cases, you can be exposed
to the levels of testosterone that we might give someone
if they're transitioning.
So the kind that can cause you to develop an enlarged clitoris, the kind that can cause
you to develop these changes from having too high of a testosterone.
We don't know when you're using those hormones, then how much progesterone to give you to
protect your uterus.
So there's all different kinds of issues associated with them, and they're very expensive as well.
So they're just not
recommended. Do you have to have your blood drawn to have this assessed effectively? No. And if
anybody, if you're 45 years or older, you do not need a blood test to get started on menopausal
hormone therapy. You know, if you're 11 and having a growth spurt, no one's like, oh, why are you
having a growth spurt? We should check your blood. We would expect you to have a growth spurt at age 11. If you had a growth spurt at age
three, that would be different. And that's the same thing for menopause. So if you're 45 or older,
and you're having hot flashes, you're having vaginal dryness, you're having irregular periods,
it's not a mystery. We're expecting it to happen. The average age of menopause is 51, right? However, it's happening to you when you're 39,
well, that's different.
We need to know, is this an earlier menopause
or is this happening for another reason?
And so if you're under the age of 45,
you need the blood work because you need to make sure
that you understand why your periods have stopped.
Now, if you're just having hot flashes,
that's a different story.
So the blood work is really if you've skipped periods. So say you're just having hot flashes, that's a different story.
So the blood work is really if you've skipped periods. So say you're 42, you haven't had a period in three months,
you need to have blood work because we should figure out why that's happened. But if you're 45 and you're having bad hot flashes
and you've had a couple of irregular periods, that's no mystery. You're starting in the menopause transition.
And right, if the average age of onset
for the menopause transition is 45, well, you know what?
50% of people are gonna be younger than 45,
and 50% of people are gonna be older.
So yeah, so it has to be put in context.
And so that's, the internet wants absolutes.
The internet wants, test my hormones, don't test my hormones.
The internet wants, you know, this or that.
But medicine is more nuanced than that. And so the only absolute I can say is if you're younger than 45 and you've skipped
more than two periods, then you need to have blood work done because we need to know why.
Is it an earlier menopause? Is it another condition that's caused your periods to stop?
If you're 45 or older, it's not a mystery why you've gone two months without a period. And one thing that we didn't talk about is one of the contraindications for starting
estrogen is being more than 10 years from your last period or over the age of 60.
And so, in general, that is associated with an increased risk of dementia and an increased
risk of cardiovascular disease.
So we want to avoid starting at when people are older.
Now, it doesn't mean like age 60,
if you're 60 years on one day,
that that's a hard stop.
But I think it's just important for people to understand
that there's a timing.
So if somebody, for example,
their last period was 55, we might not
cut them off at 60. So there's a bit of there might be a bit of wiggle room there. But in general, we
recommend, you know, if people are going to start hormones, that is going to be within 10 years,
under the age of 60. That's kind of the ideal situation and the lowest risk situation.
I can't believe how much I'm learning from you today. I thought I knew a lot about this topic,
but you're just constantly amazing me with new information.
And I know as you listen, you're thinking the same thing.
And we also need to take a quick break
to hear a word from our sponsors,
because they allow me to bring you world-class expert advice
from the amazing Dr. Jen Gunter.
So do me a favor, listen to our sponsors,
and please take a minute and share this episode
with someone who needs to hear this.
This could truly change their life.
And don't you dare go anywhere, because when we come back,
I'm gonna be waiting here with Dr. Gunter,
and you're gonna hear more
on how to deal with your symptoms,
plus how to talk to your loved ones so that they better understand and you're gonna hear more on how to deal with your symptoms. Plus, how to talk to your loved ones
so that they better understand what you're going through
and how to talk to your doctor
so you get the care that you deserve.
Stay with us.
Welcome back.
It's your friend Mel Robbins.
I am here with Dr. Jen Gunter. So Dr. Jen
Gunter, one of the things that I'm sitting here thinking about is the fact that my friends
and I all talk about menopause, right? Because we're all in the thick of it. But more than
half of the women that I know are scared of HRT. And I know it's because of the fact that
I think it was 1991 when there was that huge
study that was released. I think it was the Women's Health Initiative that cast HRT in
a negative light. And I understand that the study has been harshly criticized. It's now
30 years later, but it's very clear to me that the fear that it created, it's still
lingering and it's keeping a lot of women from even
exploring hormone replacement therapy as a safe option for them.
Can you tell us more about this study and how you think about it as a medical doctor?
Well, the Women's Health Initiative was the largest clinical trial I think that's ever
been done.
It was designed to tell whether hormone therapy, menopausal hormone therapy, was going to actually
reduce the risk of heart disease without increasing the risk of breast cancer.
And it was also there were other arms that looked at exercise, that looked at calcium,
so the calcium replacement.
So there were quite a few different arms of the Women's Health Initiative.
And the arm with estrogen plus, so when it was permarin that was used, permarin plus a progestin,
that was stopped early because they reached the threshold of concern about breast cancer.
Now, going into the Women's Health Initiative, we knew that there was a very low risk of breast cancer
associated with menopausal hormone therapy. So this wasn't like a surprise, it was kind of the threshold that was reached.
And it was communicated to the public, you know, in a way that is typically not done.
You know, usually there aren't press releases when a study is halted.
Usually we wait, we get the data, the article is published, so, you know, it's peer reviewed and we have all of that.
And that didn't happen. And that created this big hoopla where lots of things got taken out of context, lots of things sort of accelerated in ways that, you know, were uncontrollable because of your cells, right? So I don't know how many major news stories were dedicated to the WHO, but it was really out of proportion, right? And then when, when more information came out, and when there were more studies that came out,
you know, that never gets the same attention, right?
So, we know that estrogen plus a progestin is associated with an increased risk of breast
cancer, but those aren't the hormones that we typically prescribe now.
So, that's kind of the difference.
You know, we believe that the progestins,
which are slightly different molecules than progesterone,
carry the higher breast cancer risk.
It's still acceptable and in the safe range to take
that the hormone progesterone is lower risk
and that if you don't need a progesterone or a progestin,
that that risk is the lowest.
So I would say to people, if you're
taking a transdermal estrogen and oral progesterone, which
is our standard starting therapy,
we believe that the risk of breast cancer is very low.
It's not probably zero, but that it is very, very low.
We believe that if you're taking estrogen alone,
that risk is even lower.
Some people believe it's zero.
Other people believe it may be a little bit higher.
And again, it depends how you look at the data.
But I would say for the majority of people
who are suffering with symptoms related to menopause,
who have things that hormone therapy can treat,
that menopausal hormone therapy appears
to be a very, very safe option.
And you just have to look at it in context.
If you're somebody who is at higher risk for cardiovascular
disease but not super high risk, then transdermal is probably
okay, but oral isn't because there's a higher risk of blood
clots associated with oral.
So you just have to look at what is it going to do for you.
So I'm very high risk for osteoporosis.
My mother died from osteoporosis.
I have quite a high FRAC score, which is a risk calculator.
And so, that's the main reason that I'm on menopausal hormone therapy because my risk
of osteoporosis is pretty significant.
And I'm already kind of, you know, getting closer and closer to osteoporosis and osteopenia.
So, and you know, it's, you know and it's a concern for me from a health standpoint.
So that's why I'm taking it.
And so, people always want us to say like zero risk
for this and getting a car has a risk.
So I always like to sort of not talk
in those kinds of absolutes and say,
what's the reason you're on it?
And what is the risk benefit ratio for it? And what is the risk-benefit ratio for you?
And for the majority of people, the risk-benefit ratio
is absolutely going to be in the favor of benefit.
But there are some situations where it might not be.
So for example, somebody at very high risk
for cardiovascular disease, someone
who's previously had a blood clot,
someone who's previously had a heart attack.
So you have to put it in perspective.
Thank you for that because, Dr. Gunter, I've been really surprised by the number of my friends
who are suffering through menopause and perimenopause and just completely the quality of their life is impacted,
who have been afraid to try hormone replacement therapy
or even talk to their doctor about it
because somewhere in the back of their head,
they think it causes breast cancer
and that's why they're not even considering it.
And so I appreciate you just kind of clearing the air
a little bit so that people know that you should at least
go talk to your doctor about it.
Yeah, and there are calculators that can help you
determine your breast cancer risk, right?
So I would recommend, I think we heard it was Olivia Munn
who was talking about, I believe that's who it was
recently talking about, she had a breast cancer
risk assessment which led to her having an MRI,
which led to an early diagnosis of a breast cancer.
So there's several easy tools that we can do to
help explain things more in context for you.
So if somebody comes to me and they have something that
menopausal hormone therapy can help, well, I do something called
an ASCVD score, it calculates your cardiovascular risk.
We need your lipids and we need to know
your blood sugar and your blood pressure and a few other things. So we can calculate that. I need to see a lipids and we need to know your blood sugar and your blood pressure
and a few other things.
And so we can calculate that.
I need to see a mammogram and I need to ask you
some questions about your breast cancer history risk.
And that's important because at a certain level,
when your breast cancer risk is higher
based on other factors,
there's also a conversation to be had about medications
that lower your risk of breast cancer.
So there's bigger discussions to have,
but so you can do these risk calculators and you say,
look, well, I'm somebody who's got hot flashes.
Menopausal hormone therapy is the gold standard.
I have low risk for these other reasons,
so there would be no reason not to go on it.
But again, everybody weighs risk differently, right?
And so, you know, versus you're somebody that,
ooh, you've got a pretty high cardiovascular
risk. So, can we talk about one of these other treatments for your hot flashes? Or you're somebody
who's got a history of breast cancer. So, can we talk about one of these other medications for hot
flashes? I want to ask a couple more questions about HRT. So, someone listens to this episode.
about HRT. So someone listens to this episode, they feel very seen and validated, they go into their OB-GYN, they, you know, kind of say, I want to, I want to assess
the risks, and let's just say you try it, okay, you make the personal decision with
the recommendation of your doctor to go on the standard protocol. How do you know if it's working?
Well, so, are your symptoms improving?
So it's really, you know, except for...
And how long does it take?
Pretty quick.
So unless you're someone like me taking it for osteoporosis prevention, because I don't
feel any different, right?
So, you know, and that's again a really important reason to take an FDA approved medication, because I wanted to protect my bones. I need to know what I'm absorbing, right? So, so if you're have hot flashes, most people see pretty significant improvement within four weeks, you know, depending on how, how much better people feel, sometimes we might, you know, give an eight week try before switching doses. And it just depends on how people feel on the medication. So yeah, so, you know, give an eight-week try before switching doses. And it just depends on how people feel
on the medication. So, yeah, so, you know, usually with
something like hot flashes, you know, you're going to see an
improvement pretty quickly with depression, usually within a
couple of months as well. And, you know, there are also so I
always like to talk about with menopausal hormone therapy,
there's sort of green light
indications, meaning these are like the FDA approved, you know, solid reasons.
Hot flashes, night sweats, gold standard.
Osteoporosis prevention, FDA approved.
And we didn't talk about this, but if you have menopause before the age of 45, we do
recommend everybody take hormones regardless of symptoms until at least the average age
of menopause.
And then at that average age, you
can decide if you want to stay on or not,
like everybody else.
What is the average age of menopause?
51.
But so say you're starting at for,
so you've got these green light indications.
Great.
Everybody believes that the benefits outweigh the risks,
as long as you're in the right category for that.
Then there are more yellow light indications,
things where it hasn't broached,
where it's recommended in the guidelines,
but there's pretty good data to support it.
For example, depression in the menopause transition,
can be very helpful for that.
Many of us would try it if somebody's got a sleep disturbance,
even if they don't think they're waking up with hot flashes,
because sometimes people don't wake up.
But what it's doing is it's disrupting your sleep architecture,
and then you don't have as much deep sleep.
So it might be worth a try to see.
For example, I still get the occasional hot flash,
but even when I was like,
I don't wake up, but I'm so hot I wake my partner up.
I'm just a super deep sleeper, right?
But I've still had disrupted sleep.
So you might not realize that.
So it might be worth a try to see.
The data for joint pain, it's not really that great.
I mean, maybe it's gonna help 20% of people with joint pain.
So it wouldn't mean it would be wrong to try.
You know, if it doesn't work,
you're not gonna keep like pushing the dose higher
and higher and higher, because you're like,
well, you know, it was a chance and you know,
maybe it's gonna work, maybe it's not.
There is some evidence to show that
it may reduce your risk of type 2 diabetes.
Again, if you're somebody at very, very high risk,
that might be a conversation to have.
Those are like these yellow light indications.
Then if you have brain fog,
so brain fog specifically, there aren't studies to tell us
that estrogen treats brain fog. And in fact, people perform better than they think when they
have brain fog. So on cognitive testing, so it's kind of this symptom that we don't really
understand. So you could certainly have brain fog from depression, right? You could have brain fog
because you're not sleeping well. You could have, you know, so all of these other things could come into play. So, but
if your only symptom were brain fog, then I might be like, you know, it's less clear
you're going to get a benefit from that. And, you know, maybe there's a discussion to have
about what might be the other factors. But if you've also, you know, we've done a depression
questionnaire, you're scoring higher for depression,
well, brain fogs is a symptom of depression too, right?
So let's get that treated and let's see.
And then let's also work on the other foundations
like exercise and eating healthy
because there is one study that looks at, you know,
the healthy things you're supposed to do in metapods,
get your right exercise, eat a, you know,
a fiber-rich healthy diet and not smoke.
And I think it was only 8% of women did all three.
Wow. He wrote this unbelievable article that went crazy viral.
And Dr. Gunter, you say, don't use menopause to excuse mediocre men.
What does that mean?
I think everybody knows exactly what I mean. But yeah.
So there's this edge of a knife, I think, when you're a woman, right?
So, you know, we like to, women are too hormonal to this, to that.
But you can also have symptoms related to that.
So it's just really important to make sure that because of this history of causing women hysterical, calling them the madwoman in the
attic, all of that kind of stuff, because of that history, I think it's super important to be accurate
when we're assigning fault as to what the fault is. So, yeah, there was this advice column in The Guardian
and this woman had written in and I can't remember the specifics
now, but her and her husband had had a contract or, you know, a verbal agreement about how
they would be raising their children.
And he was clearly not living up to what they'd agreed upon, and he was basically whatever,
her third child.
And I think a lot of women out there know exactly what I'm talking about.
Anyway, he was her third child, and she wanted leave him because she was like, like, I don't, I don't want to be a mother to him. And
this I hear this from a lot of women. And she was writing in for advice and because he wasn't
vacuuming, it was not even doing any of the stuff she was basically doing at all. And the answer was
maybe it's menopause. Maybe you're intolerant because of your hormones.
Really? Yeah, maybe she'd go on hormone therapy. She didn't say she'd have hot flashes. She didn't say was sleeping poorly at night. She clearly laid out that they had agreed to be equal partners.
And here she was now in this relationship where she was doing all the grunt work, all the nasty stuff and yo, you know, he was out at the pub.
Like it was sort of the most obvious,
like pull the plug, get divorced, save yourself,
run, don't look back, run.
And no, maybe it was your hormones.
Cause I know that, you know,
when I was going through menopause,
you know, I had a shorter temper.
So I think it's really important
that we are not excusing the bad ways that society treats
women and saying that, oh, if you just took hormones, it would be better.
Because the answer to being mistreated is not taking hormones.
The answer to being mistreated is to be treated correctly.
I just think that it's really important that we're clear about these things.
Now if somebody comes to me and says, oh my God, like I had the perfect relationship and
my husband does everything and now that I'm not sleeping at night and I'm soaked in sweat
all the time, I've got a super short temper.
Yeah, yeah, your hormones might be having something to do with that.
You know, maybe if you actually had a good night's sleep,
this would be better.
I think most people can agree with that, right?
But that wasn't the situation that was being presented.
So I just think that it's really important,
especially like in the workplace too, right?
That many women in the workplace are treated terribly,
especially as they age,
that there's so many glass ceilings, right?
And while it's super important that workplaces accommodate menopause,
we also don't want to use that as kind of lip service,
so then we can excuse all the bad policies that are keeping women from advancing, right?
Oh, look, you know, we're letting you control the temperature
when really there's also a massive glass ceiling.
So I just think accuracy in all things.
Well said.
Can you speak directly to the woman
who's listening to you right now, Dr. Gunter,
and especially if she's not getting the support
from her family or her partner,
and she's going through menopause or perimenopause right now?
I would say that's a pretty awful place to be
if you don't feel supported. And I think whether it's menopause or perimenopause right now? I would say that's a pretty awful place to be if you don't feel supported.
And I think whether it's menopause or pregnancy or you've got any other health condition,
you want the person who loves you to support you.
So I would say that that's an awful place to be.
And to maybe have a conversation if you feel safe having that, you know, explaining what's
going on and, you know, maybe saying, hey, here are some things
that you could read so you have a better understanding
about where I'm at.
Well, a lot of women are gonna forward this episode
to their family members and to their partners.
And so I would love to have you speak directly
to the partner, the children, the family members of a woman that's going through
menopause and what they could do to be more supportive. Yeah, if you've got a
family member, you know, your mother, your sister, you know, a loved one who is going
through menopause, learn about it. And also think about what you can do around
the house
to make it easier.
Everybody needs a little bit of help.
And in many heterosexual households,
women are doing the burden of the labor around the house.
There's a study that shows even when hour per hour,
it's the same, women do more of the less fun work, right? And that doesn't,
it's not going to surprise, it doesn't surprise you, it doesn't surprise anybody. So, if you
take hour per hour, well, the man is more likely to be out in the yard playing with
the kids and the woman's more likely to be doing the laundry. So, four hours, four hours,
right? So, you know, how can you think about having a more equitable division of labor in your house,
right? And how, if you have a family member who's struggling, wouldn't you want to carry some extra
load to make it easier for them? Like, that's just being a human. Yeah, and I would imagine
any kind of support that also lowers the stress level that you feel makes you feel better too.
Yeah. From a health standpoint.
Absolutely, and ask,
can I go with you to a doctor's appointment?
Can I be your scribe?
Buy The Manipost Manifesto, my book.
Think about how you can do some little things to help.
Just, if you're not someone who's,
look at the chores that you're doing in the house.
Think about how you can pick up more.
Think about how you can listen.
Just sit and listen as well.
You know, not everybody wants an answer.
Sometimes people just want to talk.
You know, there's a great episode of Parks and Rec where, I don't know if you've seen
the show, but where Anne is pregnant and her spouse is, I can't remember his name, but
he's played by Rob Lowe. And she's pregnant and she spouse is, I can't remember his name, but he's played by Rob Lowe, and
she's pregnant and she's just very uncomfortable. And she's talking about her aches and pains
and this and that, and he just wants to solve everything. Let me get you this. Let me get
you this. Let me get you this. And she just wants him to sit and listen, right? So I think
a lot of people just want you to sit and listen, too.
I think I speak on behalf of the person listening, and I know myself when I say, can you be my gynecologist?
I mean, I want somebody as informed as you. So can you offer up any scripts or advice for how we can
have better conversations with our OB-GYNs or how we can find somebody that is really in tune with all the research
and with the recommendations of the
menopause society?
Yeah.
So, the menopause society does have certified menopause providers, and you can certainly
look for someone who is a certified menopause provider.
That's not necessarily a guarantee that they're going to give you evidence-based care.
I understand there's some who also implant pellets. that they're going to give you evidence-based care.
I understand there's some who also implant pellets,
but in general, I think that's a good place to start.
If you ask your doctor about menopause and they don't clam up,
if they can have a conversation about it,
there's lots of great people who know how to care for menopause
who haven't done the test and aren't members of the menopause society.
The other thing that I
recommend people do is you can Google the 2020 North American
Menopause Society guidelines for hormone therapy, and you can
download it.
And we'll link it in the show notes.
It's, you know, it's at PDF. Now, there's a lot of, you know,
semi-interesting things in there talking about complex studies and things like that.
But at the end of every section, they have a kind of a general, good, plain language summary.
And I think that many, many people would find that quite illuminating.
And to read that, and you can even take it with you.
Or you could read it and say, oh, I'm asking for
something and it isn't even mentioned in here. Maybe I'm
asking for something that's a little bit out of spec and so
I'll ask. You know, do a word search. You know, do, what
is it, Control F or whatever you have to do. You know, if
you've got a specific word, search the document for it and
see what shows up in there. So, that's a, it's a good place
to kind of get some basic information that's evidence
based. They have some information on their website too. So, it's a good place to kind of get some basic information that's evidence-based.
They have some information on their website, too.
And you know, I would just say that for the majority of people who want to try menopausal
hormone therapy, a six-month to a year trial is as low-risk as anything can be.
You know, when we look at the risks of breast cancer, if you assume that the studies
that show risk are correct, again, we've had this spectrum of some studies showing one
thing, other studies showing nothing, there's no risk with a couple of years. Like, that
risk doesn't accumulate for a while. So, if you're really scared, there's essentially,
and you're a good candidate cardiovascularly, trying it for six months is about as low risk
a therapy as there can be.
And if you try it, you're like, well, this hasn't improved my quality of life.
You know, there's your answer.
And if you're on it, you're like, wow, my quality of life has changed a lot.
Then there's your answer.
Because you know, there's lots of things that haven't been studied.
You know, there's, you know, There's other symptoms like many women talk about,
they just don't feel like themselves.
Well, we don't have a scoring system for that.
I don't know what that means.
And you know what?
You not feeling like yourself and me not feeling like myself,
I mean two completely different things.
We'd be completely different biological phenomena,
but we're using the same words to describe it.
So because it's such a low risk thing,
if you're using the FDA approved therapies
and you're in a low cardiovascular risk, there's very little downside for saying, you know,
is an appropriate dose improving things. The one word of caution I would give to people
is you want to, if you're not improving, to be very careful about dose escalation, right?
So if you think about an estrogen patch that has 100 micrograms of estradiol, that is about
equivalent if you even it out through a whole month to the amount of estrogen you make when
you're ovulating.
So if you're needing more than that, I would say, and you're over the age of 45, there
probably needs to be a bit more reflection because because why would you need, on average,
more estrogen than your body was making?
So, you know, so you just want to say, like,
if, you know, if you're needing more than that,
then that might be a time for sort of like a,
you know, a reassessment of things.
And it might, you might be on the right track,
but, you know, I would say that that's a time to reassess.
Dr. Gunter, if you could just speak to the person listening,
and if there was one or two things that are the most
important takeaways from everything that you shared
today, what are the things that you would want the person
listening to focus on?
Well, I would want to say that accurate,
evidence-based information is really the best way through any medical
situation.
And we don't always have all the answers.
And women's health has been underfunded.
But having the information that we have
is a lot better than just wild guesses, right?
So to just keep that in mind, that we do have
quite a lot of information.
That if you're not being heard by your physician, then I know it's hard and that shouldn't be
that way, but get a second opinion.
And you know, just be mindful of people that are selling product because, you know, there's
a lot of incentivization.
That's not even a word, is there?
It's a lot of incentive.
It makes sense to me. There's a lot of incentivization. That's not even a word, is there?
It's a lot of incentive.
Makes sense to me.
There's a lot of incentive, or there can be,
or there can be bias.
So you just need to be mindful about that.
I get paid the same.
I'm on salary.
I get paid the same whether I talk to somebody about exercise,
whether I give them hormones.
I don't have any kind of deal with a specific company.
I don't take any money from any pharmaceutical company.
You can look me up. So,
the bias can come in all different ways as well.
So, I just think it's important that if you're on
social media and someone's also selling
a product to just be really aware of the message. That's all.
I just love how you explain this stuff.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you so much for having me.
It's been great.
I feel so empowered and I am also happy that I got to reveal to you how much I did not
know and how much I was doing wrong.
Because if I can save you the headache or the time or the heartache that I caused myself
because I just didn't know, if that's what you get out of this,
you learn from my mistakes, holy smokes.
That's absolutely incredible.
So thank you for spending time listening to something
that could change your life.
Thank you for sharing this episode with women in your life
because you know anybody that you share this with,
it's gonna help them
and it's gonna help them take control of their health.
And in case no one else tells you today, I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love
you, I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to create a better life.
And after today's conversation learning from Dr. Jen Gunter, I know that you have the research-backed
facts and the medical advice that you need in order to be more empowered
and informed about your health. And that is one of the best things that you could do to create a
better life. Alrighty, I'll talk to you in a few days. So Dr. Gunter, thank you for jumping on a
plane and flying across Comfort. I can't even speak that.
Let me say go.
Oh, sorry.
What's that you knew? You were just warming up. It's all good.
3, 2, 1, audio recording.
Can I also, I just realized I should probably clean my glasses.
I just took off a layer of street grime from mine.
And now I'm like, oh wow, my God,
I can actually see.
It's amazing.
Do you like that?
Yeah, I'm gonna do one more.
Hold on a second.
Okay, great, great, great.
Okay, gotcha.
Will you go up a little?
Let me do it one more time.
Okay, what was that?
Whatever it's called.
You know, dogs are a gangster.
You know, you want me to do that right now?
No problem, I'll do it.
Okay.
You know, you want me to do that right now? No problem, I'll do it.
Okay.
Go Tracy, go.
All right, thank you.
Thank you for letting me talk so much.
Oh, thank God you did too.
You were awesome.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist, and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode.