Daily Mail

Women f locking to private clinics amid HRT crisis in NHS

As HRT shortages bite, the producer of Davina McCall’s landmark TV programme argues

- By Sophie Huskisson

PRIVATE menopause clinics are seeing ten times as many patients as they were 18 months ago as women desperatel­y try to access HRT medication.

Experts said many women feel dismissed by NHS GPs who tell them they are ‘too young’ to be going through the menopause or wrongly diagnose them with depression.

Many research HRT online and choose to seek treatment at private clinics due to delays in getting prescripti­ons and waits of around a year for an appointmen­t with an NHS specialist.

One private practice is seeing 4,000 patients a month – up from 300 in just a year and a half. GPs are under growing pressure due to a national shortage of HRT, particular­ly Oestrogel, which is used by around 30,000 women in the UK to help manage debilitati­ng symptoms of the menopause. The British Menopause Society has advised doctors to consider alternativ­e medication, including Sandrena gel and Lenzetto spray.

The Daily Mail launched a HRT manifesto on Saturday calling for changes including making it mandatory for medical students to be taught about the menopause and for women to be given menopause informatio­n at NHS health checks.

Women must ask GPs for a new prescripti­on when they cannot access medication.

Jane Pangbourne of the HRT Truth Collective said: ‘GPs are under pressure because they don’t understand menopause and HRT in the sense that they haven’t been trained.

‘I’m not blaming GPs at all. They’ve been left hung out to dry in a lot of cases because they’ve been given misinforma­tion or no informatio­n about HRT, so there’s extra pressure on them to provide a solution to these poor women.

‘The NHS waiting lists, of course, are really long anyway for everything specialist. The menopause specialist waiting lists are sometimes over a year, so women are paying to see a private specialist and even in those cases, the waiting list can be up to six months.’

A survey of 464 women by a private online menopause centre found 30 per cent would consider seeing a private specialist because they do not feel they can access the care they need on the NHS.

Dr Louise Newson, a menopause specialist, said her waiting list of 8,000 was ‘unheard of for a private clinic’.

She added: ‘We have clearly reached crisis point.’ The GP said she is ‘appalled’ that so many women are coming to her clinic for something that ‘should be adequately managed in the NHS’.

A statement on the website of Dr Alice Scott said the GP’s private clinic has been forced to close its waiting list and is unable to make appointmen­ts for new patients due to ‘unpreceden­ted demand’.

Dr Shirin Lakhani, a women’s health expert, said: ‘I have seen a huge increase in demand in patients coming to see me about menopause symptoms.

‘Sometimes women are told they are too young to be going through the menopause or that they don’t have the obvious symptoms, but the perimenopa­use can start in women in their 30s, although is more common between 40 and 45.

‘While many women are now finding the confidence to come forward to speak about their health with their GP, they are finding that their symptoms are overlooked or diminished.

‘Many are either told that this is a normal part of life and they should just put up with it until the symptoms pass, or prescribed anti-depressant­s to treat the associated symptoms of the menopause rather than treating the cause.’

■ The menopause should be treated with ‘protective’ HRT before it ‘reshapes the brain’, US researcher­s have said.

A study found it reduces grey matter, a major component of the central nervous system.

The shortage of hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT) has caused uproar, igniting debates in Parliament and triggering the appointmen­t of an HRT tsar. The lack of oestrogen gel means that thousands of menopausal women are going cold turkey and their symptoms are returning overnight. hopefully they’ll get their hormones and lives back soon. And then they may want something more: testostero­ne.

For as a new generation of menopausal women have discovered, they are missing not just two hormones — progestero­ne and oestrogen — but three.

Testostero­ne is a female hormone, too, and one we make in the largest amount; three times that of oestrogen.

Yet no one tells you that in school biology lessons. According to the British Menopause Society, it helps energy, mood, libido and cognition, plus it maintains muscle and bone.

While oestrogen and progestero­ne drop suddenly at menopause, testostero­ne gently peters out. But supplement­ing with testostero­ne at that time can help with debilitati­ng symptoms, too.

I’ve been using testostero­ne cream for six years as part of my HRT.

The main difference it makes for me is in memory — before I began taking it I sometimes panicked and struggled to find the words for things. Now I can give a speech for an hour without notes.

At work, I felt like a clapped-out banger before I started testostero­ne. Now I know I’ll cruise smoothly through the day, like a Tesla.

It’s not just my experience — as part of a documentar­y I produced, Davina McCall: Sex, Mind And The Menopause, which was screened last night, we monitored a group of working women in their 50s who started taking testostero­ne on top of their regular HRT over three months. The results were astonishin­g.

‘I seem to have a sharpness back, a real focus and clarity about what I’m trying to say,’ said Joanne harding, a councillor. Before the experiment she’d been exhausted. ‘It’s tiring feeling so tired all the time,’ she’d told us. (It wasn’t just how they felt — blood tests showed all the women’s testostero­ne levels were low-to-zero at the start.)

Paula Fry, a senior manager in the City, had said of her libido: ‘Brad Pitt wouldn’t do it for me.’ After testostero­ne treatment her mojo was back, and in general she said ‘it just feels like a lift in mood, the missing piece of the jigsaw’.

Before our experiment, business manager Maggie Dennis just said resignedly: ‘What is libido? I’d almost forgotten about it.’

And after? ‘I feel more like myself. I can think more clearly. I’ve got my va-va-voom back!’

Yet as Dr Zoe hodson, a GP from Manchester and menopause specialist, said in the programme: ‘We lose three hormones and they give us back two. Whose bright idea was that?’

She also explained that women’s fears that testostero­ne supplement­s would make them hairy were largely unfounded. Menopause experts give women only a tiny bit of testostero­ne, and roughly the same amount as the average woman would have in her early 40s (women need a tenth of the amount men make).

Occasional­ly women don’t tolerate it well, and one report has suggested that some can experience mild acne and hair growth — particular­ly if they use too much.

But after six years, I haven’t grown a moustache. Dr hodson said: ‘As long as it stays within the normal female physiologi­cal range, we can discount the beards, we can discount the testicles!’

What was surprising is that testostero­ne in both women and men is commonly viewed as a sex hormone, ramping up desire.

But the tests with the women for our documentar­y — and what they emphasised themselves — showed that the hormone had brought back their mental agility as well as their ability to feel pleasure.

Carolyn harris, a Labour MP who has led the campaign in Parliament for a yearly payment for HRT prescripti­ons, is another who has experience­d the brainboost­ing impact of testostero­ne.

She started taking testostero­ne on top of her regular HRT last year, and is delighted with the results: ‘Testostero­ne should be readily available on prescripti­on for all women,’ she told me.

Many women in the spotlight take testostero­ne and are happy to talk about it, including Lorraine Kelly and Davina McCall, who has seen great results but admitted in last night’s show: ‘Testostero­ne was another hormone I lied about taking — I felt embarrasse­d and ashamed about it.’ Not any more.

The message is getting out there, but slowly: in a survey of more than 4,000 women for the programme, 61 per cent had never heard that testostero­ne could be part of HRT. Yet NHS guidelines approve it ‘for menopausal women with low sexual desire if HRT alone is not effective’.

Setting up our testostero­ne tests for the programme, we decided to go beyond just filming.

We wanted the women to have solid evidence for themselves about any changes, so they filled in a form rating the severity of more than 20 menopause symptoms, and a testostero­ne-specific test which asked about brain fog, energy and libido. Most found that after the testostero­ne treatment their general menopause symptoms, such as difficulty sleeping, had gone from extreme to rare or non-existent. And they were no longer misplacing objects around the house — the car-keys-in-the-fridge syndrome had gone.

We didn’t have time to show all of this on TV, but our interviewe­es agreed to do other ‘before’ and ‘after’ tests, including memory checks. Again, there were improvemen­ts. ‘I can remember my husband’s mobile number now,’ said one tester.

Obviously, this was not proper science, and after you have done a test once you tend to get better at it. But it did give the women insight into their progress.

Menopause researcher­s are hoping to do cognitive trials on a larger scale, and academics at Manchester Metropolit­an University are planning to investigat­e women and testostero­ne with data from the UK Biobank (a project involving 500,000 people).

There has been one trial comparing testostero­ne gel and a placebo on 92 women who were not already on HRT, conducted by Professor Susan Davis at Monash University, Australia.

It showed ‘a consistent finding of improved performanc­e on tests of verbal learning and memory with testostero­ne therapy’.

Studies have shown that testostero­ne treatment does not raise

At work, it turned me from a clappedout banger into a Tesla

Few GPs feel confident about prescribin­g it to women

the risk of breast cancer — long-term risks remain untested, but using gel or cream is known to be safer than pills or implants.

Despite testostero­ne being approved by the NHS, very few GPs feel confident about prescribin­g it. Because it was once wrongly considered to be a male-only hormone, they were not taught about it at medical school.

A female testostero­ne patch was approved in the UK years ago, particular­ly for younger women with low sexual desire after a hysterecto­my or removal of the ovaries, but was discontinu­ed due to ‘lack of demand’. So now women are given male-sized sachets or pumps of testostero­ne gel on the NHS, and have to work out one tenth of the dose themselves.

I’m on a six-month waiting list just to apply to get testostero­ne gel at my NHS menopause clinic.

I get the rest of my HRT on the NHS but have to go private to buy AndroFeme, a testostero­ne cream for women that’s licensed in Australia and imported here. It costs me about £160 a year — but I’d rather have that than a cappuccino in the morning.

The British Menopause Society guidelines for doctors note that a lack of testostero­ne in women ‘can lead to a number of distressin­g sexual symptoms such as low sexual desire, arousal and orgasm.

‘Testostero­ne deficiency can also contribute to a reduction in general quality of life, tiredness, depression, headaches, cognitive problems, osteoporos­is and muscle loss.’ Topping it up seems to be a no-brainer. As Davina McCall asks: ‘When will they give us our own hormone back?’

Kate Muir is the author of everything You need to Know about the Menopause (But Were too afraid to ask).

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Picture:GETTY

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