The Mail on Sunday

It’s time for husbands, brothers and sons to join us... and bring an end to the crisis

- By DAVINA McCALL TV PRESENTER AND CAMPAIGNER

RECENTLY I heard a story about a lady I will call Natalie, who was in her late 40s when she was hit by depression and anxiety so profound that she was confined to her bed for a month. She didn’t have the energy even to get up and make a cup of tea.

As a result, she lost everything – her fiancé left her, she was fired from her job and she had to leave her home because she could no longer afford to maintain it. Her friends and immediate family were so frightened for her that they would not allow her to be on her own, anxious that history might repeat itself, as Natalie’s mother had taken her own life at the age of 45.

You might wonder what on earth could have plunged Natalie into such despair? For some of you it may be a shock to read it was the menopause, although others among you who have battled its debilitati­ng symptoms – or watched others do so – may not be so surprised.

Natalie’s story is only one of many that I have read on websites and in the WhatsApp messages with which I have been inundated since speaking out about my own menopause in last year’s documentar­y and on my social media.

Many pierce my heart, like the Scottish woman I interview for my new documentar­y that airs tomorrow, who told the heartbreak­ing story of the moment she was in a car and wondered what to drive into to kill herself.

These stories aren’t uncommon – and it’s borne out by statistics. It’s no coincidenc­e that the highest rate of suicide among women is between the ages of 45 and 55 – the time when women go through this lifechangi­ng transition.

Other symptoms, which can last for years, include hot flushes; night sweats; migraines; palpitatio­ns; dry mouth, eyes, skin and vagina; brain fog and aching joints. Again the statistics make clear that these symptoms can affect quality of life to the extent that some women leave their jobs and their relationsh­ips fail.

The good news is that treatment is available in the form of HRT, which can help manage all symptoms, replenishi­ng vital hormones that your body has lost.

HRT also plays an active part in disease management, massively reducing your risk of dementia, motor neurone diseases, Parkinson’s and MS, as well as reducing your risk of heart disease, Type 2 diabetes and osteoporos­is.

It’s not an exaggerati­on to say that for many women it’s transforma­tive. It was for me when I started taking it seven years ago, and it was for Natalie, who – after finally being persuaded to see her doctor – was immediatel­y placed on a high dose of HRT and who is now able to face the world again.

Many other women will testify to its miraculous qualities. If it’s available that is.

We’ve all read the news reports about women bartering their diminishin­g supplies over the internet, or trying to buy them from unknown – and very often untrustwor­thy – suppliers abroad on the black market. I would urge women not to do it, but it’s an indicator of how desperate they are to get their hands on HRT treatment.

Many women are nothing short of terrified at being without it and I don’t think it is being melodramat­ic to say this is a crisis.

Nor is it the first time this has happened: there have been on-andoff shortages of HRT for years, and it’s not been uncommon in the past for women to turn to the private sector, paying through the nose for something which should be available from their doctor for a quarter of the price.

Today, though, the situation has got so bad that even being prepared to pay for HRT doesn’t guarantee women will get it. I can’t imagine the same apparent torpor being shown by the authoritie­s if this were another form of medication.

Can you imagine the outcry if there was a shortage of insulin? It would be all hands to the pump, and rightly so. Yet only a relatively small percentage are diabetic, but the menopause happens to 52 per cent of the population. That’s more than half of us, potentiall­y facing a crisis at some point.

Of course, not everyone has a terrible time. Menopause is different for everyone, and some women sail through with barely a hot flush or flash of temper. Lucky them!

I certainly wasn’t one of those. I started with symptoms around ten years ago after suffering brain fog and anxiety to the extent I thought I was losing my mind. In my mid40s, I was considered by my doctor to be too young to be menopausal, so I took the decision to consult a gynaecolog­ist. They put me on HRT patches which give me much needed oestrogen – the hormone whose rapid depletion in menopause causes so many of our problems – and a coil which gives me progestero­ne by way of balance.

I felt better almost instantly and have been vocal ever since about the fact that I intend to take HRT until the day I die.

But I also know I was lucky: too many women are going to their GPs and getting diagnosed with depression even though guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) say that if a woman over 45 is presenting as depressed or anxious then they should be offered HRT.

Instead many doctors are routinely giving out anti-depressant­s, which don’t work, and are simply a waste of time and money. It’s one of so many injustices in this country, where it can sometimes feel that, when it comes to the health system, women are second-class citizens.

It’s hard to see it any differentl­y when you learn that in Scotland, doctors prescribe the oral tablet form of HRT, a synthetic version that is linked – although only fractional­ly so – to a slightly incrementa­lly higher risk of breast cancer compared with the bio-identical hormone gel, patch or spray.

The reason? Expense of course: it costs £18 more per year per person to provide the gel.

Around the country, different regions are offering different types of HRT – a postcode lottery that is nothing short of a scandal.

There is some evidence, too, that there is a divide running along wealth lines, with more affluent areas getting better access to a wider range of HRT options.

It’s one reason I’ve decided to use my platform in the public eye to campaign for change. It’s a campaign I would urge everyone to join – including our sons, brothers and husbands.

I don’t see this as a feminist issue, it’s an everyone issue. All those women going through the menopause have families, or work colleagues or friends.

It may not be their bodies but it is still their problem. The best thing

Symptoms can affect quality of life – some women leave their jobs

We know there’s a problem. We need a solution – and quickly

you can do if you want to make noise is join us on menopausem­andate.com because we are going to empower ourselves to make a change.

That means young women too. They may not be able to imagine it now, but they will all be menopausal one day.

Happily, there is hope. Many brave female MPs have talked in Parliament about their own experience­s, while the wondrous ball of energy that is Carolyn Harris MP, is proving to be an absolute juggernaut in driving for change – putting the menopause at the forefront of the government agenda. I am pleased to see that it is viewed as a cross-party issue, one on which everyone can agree.

I also welcome the appointmen­t of Madelaine McTernan as ‘HRT Tsar’. Her success with the pioneering Vaccines Taskforce – on which she played a leading role – bodes well.

We know there’s a problem. Now we need a solution, and quickly.

The first port of call is talking to the companies who supply HRT, to find out what is happening in the supply chain, how those problems can be ironed out, and what strategies can be put in place to make sure this never happens again.

It is unsustaina­ble. And it is destroying lives.

Davina McCall: Sex, Mind And The Menopause is on Channel 4

tomorrow at 9pm.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom