Why You're Gaining Weight! - Every Woman Needs To Know This About Menopause | Dr. Louise Newson

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 95

  • @cearilindubhlaoi9507
    @cearilindubhlaoi9507 11 месяцев назад +61

    Louise is doing women across the world the bigest favour. educational podcasts like this is whats so needed for every woman and all the Doctor's...thank you louise for all the work you have done & still doing much respect to you always ❤❤

    • @hayleysmith5077
      @hayleysmith5077 6 месяцев назад +1

      She is larger than Life I Truly respect her 💝🙏🏻

  • @dianasmith1398
    @dianasmith1398 10 месяцев назад +16

    I am post menopausal...i did take estrogen for ten years till the doctor cut me off. It really helped me. But i went thru divorce in my forties mostly because i started peri menopause in my 30 s. My symtoms were extreme so my family and me suffered. I wish the doctor would have helped me cause i felt crazy. Thank you for this video. Wished i knew more years ago

  • @artbylynnnorris
    @artbylynnnorris Год назад +22

    I've watched many podcasts with Louise in, I love how she really opened up her personal experiences and I can relate to so many in yours, hindsight is a wonderful thing, she seems to be vilified by the media frequently and by people in her profession and you can see here where her passion for change comes from. I'm educated enough thanks to Louise to know I need HRT which ones to try and have been through alot till I found one that absorbed, Testosterone has been a game changed for me, sadly I've had to source this privately, what's really hard is to find the balance of what's right for you and to get back up to find it and prescribe it, so keep going!!

  • @susanearle7087
    @susanearle7087 9 месяцев назад +8

    Lovely to see the real Louise and not just Louise the professional. A very special conversation. Thank you both.

  • @crh251
    @crh251 10 месяцев назад +12

    I love this woman. Thank you for speaking out for all those women suffering.

  • @susanloffhagen7788
    @susanloffhagen7788 6 месяцев назад +10

    I went through menopause at 38. I had a male doctor who was sensitive to women s issues and I had presented with the issue that I did not know what was wrong with me as I had become tearful and no longer knew myself! He did a hormone test( this was 30 years ago) then he told me that I was more than half way through menopause A huge shock at 38. I was immediatly put on HRT. We had to change the dose twice to get it right. When I had to have an operation 28 years later the doctor took me off HRT and I swung back into all the menopausal symptoms ! It was horrendous and he would not listen until he went to a talk from a woman doctor who lectured all these specialists on what they, in essence were doing to women by not doing after care in regards to hormones. He rang me with an apology and an appointment with this wonderful woman. She tested me for all hormones bloods and goodness knows what else. We trialled bio identical hormones . Back to normal again.
    This stage of life women go through can ruin lives, marriages and a woman’s confidence in themselves. We need every GO aware of and sympathetic to a woman’s journey.

  • @Hasmiral
    @Hasmiral 11 месяцев назад +34

    It feels like fighting against windmills. I am 51 now and the last year was actually the worst of my life. I was deeply perimenopausal and no gynecologist or dr. would understand the impact of my horrific symptoms. I kept reading, researching and educating myself until I managed to go on HRT and as the last step (this was the hardest one) I got my GP (with pressure) to prescribe testosterone as a private recipe in Germany because the society here is still ignorant talking about "the male hormone" denying it to women. I was at my worst before taking these hormones and I can still not talk about it to many same aged women because they deny any problems, they laugh about my symptoms, they don`t stand together and that makes me extremely angry. Before HRT I was a mental wreck ready to leave my job after more than 20 years.... Nobody would understand my pain. I`s still not all superfine but I can live with my symptoms much better now and I got myself the help I needed. My own effort-against windmills.

    • @AnimalFarm341
      @AnimalFarm341 10 месяцев назад +7

      I’m going after testosterone. Have to find a provider willing, it’s regulated in the US. From what I’ve learned, we make more testosterone than estrogen; which explains why even with estrogen and progesterone I feel like crap still and can’t sleep.

    • @dieannamercurio4205
      @dieannamercurio4205 10 месяцев назад

      what is the name of the HRT youre taking?

    • @amberinrenee2545
      @amberinrenee2545 8 месяцев назад +3

      I’m in the states and we have the same issues here. Thank you for sharing your experience we’re one step closer to informing other women and improving our health . Blessings ❤

    • @everhappy6312
      @everhappy6312 7 месяцев назад +4

      Thank you for sharing your experience. I just messaged my doctor and she put me on compounded Estrogen, Testosterone and Progesterone

    • @ellenmeilee
      @ellenmeilee 5 месяцев назад

      @@AnimalFarm341In the UK it’s an absolute travesty that even if you are lucky enough to get a GP ago prescribe HRT for menopause, testosterone is not included in that so you have to try and source privately for a specialist clinic, which, consultation along with the cream, costs nearly £400.

  • @charleedell92
    @charleedell92 11 месяцев назад +21

    The sad thing is women know all this, it is clinicians who would do well to learn about the harms of untreated loss of sex hormones. If men routinely outlived their testicles they would be able to get replacement just like that, it wouldn't be controversial or taboo. They wouldn't have to print off the NICE guidelines and go into battle to get treated.

  • @victoriaburton7558
    @victoriaburton7558 21 день назад +1

    Great podcast, but please Rupy, sit and listen. Stop typing on your laptop! Thank you Louise as always for this vital information.

  • @lindseystanford808
    @lindseystanford808 11 месяцев назад +37

    I keep trying to encourage my friends to try HRT but some are very reluctant because many doctors are still afraid.
    My doctor said Ishouldonly take it for 2 years!
    On my daughters ward are women with strokes, falls, weakness, blood pressure tablets and statins but not one of them has taken or been prescribed HRT. It costs the NHS a fortune and the women their independence. I am so frustrated by this ignorance of the benefits and the false evidence that is still presented as fact.
    Please keep going, Louise.

    • @eunice6694
      @eunice6694 11 месяцев назад +1

      3:09 The UK women are spoiled because the NHS covers many things. In Ireland we always go private because the public health system is deliberately downgraded as policy. We pay for HRT each month, around 40 euro

    • @kychpal6236
      @kychpal6236 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@eunice6694 We are lucky to have the NHS. But the issue for many women who take the lead from the GP, is that doctors are often reluctant to prescribe. Many GP's are not as knowledgable on this subject as they should be, so if one is not feisty and informed they will not prescribe. I have been on it for 10 years, I have bone issues, so have argued my point from that perspective. HRT has given me a better quality of life. We are required to work till 66 so need to be healthy.

    • @jessicahitchens6926
      @jessicahitchens6926 9 месяцев назад +1

      Maybe its those injections causing those mysterious strokes and myocarditis 🤡

    • @HelplessHawk
      @HelplessHawk 3 месяца назад

      Spot on. My doc wont prescribe me so i paid for appt at Newson clinic. Its nit cheap notr the HRT prescription for 3 months cost me £168 but hoping i can give the letter to doctor so they will prescribe me. I wont be able to afford that 4 times a year! ​@kychpal6236

  • @ClumsySmurfett
    @ClumsySmurfett Год назад +11

    Firstly, I love your channel and recipes 😊
    Secondly, Thank you so much for interviewing Louise. She's a beacon for all women silently suffering.
    Now, to just find a doctor in Australia that doesn't make me spend a fortune jumping through a million hoops till I can't be bothered jumping anymore 🤞🏻
    I live in hope 😂

  • @AshlingMcgovern-ir9bu
    @AshlingMcgovern-ir9bu 10 месяцев назад +4

    Louise you are a legend ❤❤❤❤❤ im 40 my mam died few years back so im goin threw this and didn't have my mam to ask now i feel u have helped me xxxxxx 💕💕

  • @angelahodge426
    @angelahodge426 10 месяцев назад +13

    I have to permanently now stay on a sugar free/low carbs diet not to gain weight. I would have taken HRT had we not been scaremongered about risks of cancer years ago.

  • @kathrynannis6729
    @kathrynannis6729 9 месяцев назад +3

    Louise's work is so very important - fantastic to see her on the Dr's Kitchen pod

  • @anne-louisegoldie
    @anne-louisegoldie 11 месяцев назад +6

    Thank you, this was great. Really informative and encouraging. Louise is a fantastic advocate and menopause specialist 💛

  • @janemasini2810
    @janemasini2810 9 месяцев назад +2

    ❤ louise newson she an AMAZING WOMAN THAT CARES AND HELPS WOMEN GOING THROUGH THE MENOPAUSE ❤
    I LOVE TO GO TO YOUR CLINIC❤

  • @everhappy6312
    @everhappy6312 7 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you Dr. Newsome. You are VALUED ❤

  • @sofie5180
    @sofie5180 3 месяца назад +1

    i love her so much, its so sad how women have been neglected and thank god for all the women speaking up to change the laws world wide 💗🙏. I can't help thinking why are people so silenced, men, women who want to do good for century's. I really love this dynamic between you two 💕 thank you for this podcast i've read quit a bit im on HRT and didnt know it lasts till we die - WHAT !!! lol

  • @SharonBuxton-q4m
    @SharonBuxton-q4m Год назад +11

    I salute Louise for the work she is doing.
    However, having been diagnosed with ER+ breast cancer, HRT is forbidden.
    I feel forgotten and left behind.
    All I can do is eat healthy, reduce my weight and exercise.
    You need to interview Dr Liz O'Riorden.

    • @lindseystanford808
      @lindseystanford808 11 месяцев назад +13

      I had ER+ breast cancer in 2018 which was successfully treated and then was given Letrozole (which aims to block oestrogen thus causing severe menopause symptoms). I felt so weak, miserable, foggy etc that I chose to stop it but being in my 60s Iwas still menopausal. I then found the Newson clinic during lockdown and started HRT and eventually Testosterone. I am now 5 years clear and feel younger and fitter than before cancer. HRT does NOT cause cancer but prevents many other diseases as well as relieving the misery.
      Thank you Louise for fighting so hard for women to live, not just exist.

    • @charleedell92
      @charleedell92 11 месяцев назад +9

      Most survivors of breast cancer actually die from cardiovascular disease NOT breast cancer. Appropriate hormone therapy reduces this risk. Women should be given the right to choose quality of life and protection from worse diseases over the small theoretical risk of breast cancer.

    • @AnimalFarm341
      @AnimalFarm341 10 месяцев назад +4

      Actually you just need to find a well educated practitioner. Dr Susan hardwick- smith specifically talks about the truth with cancer and hrt- see her video “the importance of testosterone in women”. She isn’t the only doc talking about this cancer misnomer.

    • @jessicahitchens6926
      @jessicahitchens6926 9 месяцев назад +3

      Do you want quality or quantity of life? Most cancers are caused by our environment. Its rarely hereditary. "Cancer treatments" kill most people or does irreversibly damage especially to the endocrine system.

    • @christinakuczora4862
      @christinakuczora4862 4 месяца назад +1

      @@AnimalFarm341Good luck in finding a well educated practitioner!

  • @Carlybrown304
    @Carlybrown304 Месяц назад +1

    I have PMDD and ADHD plus I’m 50 and been going through perimenopause since 42, I am now at the point where I simply cannot function and just want to end my life as I’ve tried numerous HRT but with the PMDD and ADHD they don’t seem to work. I only feel normal 7 days of a month. I am having accidents on the road and in my house, I’m so dangerously clumsy, I have zero memory, I isolate as much as possible. I was a happy soul up to 42 and now I am a miserable wreck. I don’t drink alcohol, I try stay healthy. I have lost many jobs and can’t claim PIP yet I’m a single mum and need to pay my mortgage n bills. Nothing available for me. I’m fear for my life 😢

  • @virginiemazy7054
    @virginiemazy7054 Год назад +5

    Thanks a lot for the video. It was interesting.
    Just finished a book about menopause from the dr Stacy Sims.
    I have the impression that menopause is more and more talked about and thanks for being part of that movement !

  • @anniebauer2563
    @anniebauer2563 7 месяцев назад +1

    Louise--thank you and thank your family for giving woman so much time and effort to validate & educate this experience!

  • @TiringharpCaleb
    @TiringharpCaleb 5 месяцев назад +3

    Dr. Newson describes that menopause lasts until the day we die, does that mean I should stay on some level of HRT as long as I can? I just started at 48. And thank you thank you for this enlightening discussion!!

    • @jt8142
      @jt8142 4 месяца назад +2

      Yes. I plan to stay on HRT until my last breath.

  • @karinvondalerhealingarts3030
    @karinvondalerhealingarts3030 11 месяцев назад +4

    Excellent interview!

  • @zouhourbarrouta-graham483
    @zouhourbarrouta-graham483 3 месяца назад

    great video - sad the title is a bit misleading, as it is about much more than weight in this video. Thanks for inviting Louise Newson.

  • @ankaviva
    @ankaviva 10 месяцев назад +3

    "Wait till you get a heart disease or diabetes and then we'll address that" is the British way of doing things. They place way more importance in prophylaxis on the European continent.

  • @wendywilliams9893
    @wendywilliams9893 Год назад +3

    So interesting. Learned a lot as always

  • @alisonm26
    @alisonm26 Год назад +2

    Very informative. Thank you for this video/podcast

  • @katalinujhelyigomez8859
    @katalinujhelyigomez8859 Год назад +4

    Very interesting podcast, as always and it's great to know that even medical doctors catastrophise about their health 😊. Does this mean though that all women, regardless of how they experience (peri)menopause, should be on HRT to reduce the risk of CVD, T2D etc? thanks!

  • @mariadockree4145
    @mariadockree4145 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for very informative content, loved it. May I ask what is the name of the book Louise referred to at around minute 19 of the video please? Many thanks

    • @cm1906
      @cm1906 10 месяцев назад

      The book is called “Unwell Women” by Elinor Cleghorn. I’m looking forward to reading it as well!

  • @shelleykapp9637
    @shelleykapp9637 4 месяца назад

    This interview was excellent!!

  • @kyliejackson6858
    @kyliejackson6858 11 месяцев назад +5

    I am in menopause due to hysterectomy last year, both ovaries also removed. I am now 50. Can i just take testosterone instead of estrogen?

    • @cearilindubhlaoi9507
      @cearilindubhlaoi9507 11 месяцев назад +8

      You need all 3 hormones to feel optimal...but you need to start with estrogen &progesterone first , then you introduce testosterone when estrogen & progesterone are settled & balanced for you ...

    • @kychpal6236
      @kychpal6236 9 месяцев назад +6

      I don't think you need progesterone, because it is only needed to protect your womb when you take estrogen. Probably estrogen and testosterone.

    • @fayececco3787
      @fayececco3787 9 месяцев назад +3

      Yes if you don't have a uterus you only nedd estrogen and testosterone, but you have to a blood test 1st to see what your levels are now.

    • @emilygoodchild7262
      @emilygoodchild7262 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@kychpal6236some take progesterone just because they like the sedative affect (helps with sleep). I learned that from dr louise newson. Also if you have history of endometriosis and have had Surgical Menopause, you need it, if it all hasnt gone away. As in my case.

    • @kerriefrancis3807
      @kerriefrancis3807 Месяц назад

      Unless you have endometriosis, then progesterone is important. Or if you want progesterone. It is an important hormone.

  • @SurrenderToTheFlowTarot
    @SurrenderToTheFlowTarot 10 месяцев назад +2

    What hormone level is optimal when on hrt?

    • @spacedazlelu
      @spacedazlelu 8 месяцев назад +2

      There is no one size fits all, we need to be at physiologic levels(your personal levels), it’s trail and error with hormone testing and literally how you feel. I think I listened to a podcast with Louise the other day and she suggested how helpful it would be if woman’s hormones were tested at age 30 so that when we get to peri and our hormones start disappearing then it would be simpler to figure out the level each individuals levels are meant to be.

  • @suedenardo9170
    @suedenardo9170 3 месяца назад

    What kind of ring and where do you get that? Also, I have been trying to get Bhrt for years and can't get a doctor to prescribe them. I am now 67. I don't have hot flashes or sweats any longer but I have all the other symptoms.

  • @suedenardo9170
    @suedenardo9170 3 месяца назад

    How do you get a doctor to prescribe bhrt? I have been to 6 doctors, and I have all the symptoms except sweats and flashes. I am now 67 and they say I don't need them because I'm through it.

  • @emmarennie4199
    @emmarennie4199 4 месяца назад

    Wld all women benefit from the testosterone?
    How much wld we ask for . Think the doctors wld fob us off . Thank You for your work Louise 🎉

  • @swild3634
    @swild3634 5 месяцев назад

    Is anyone on bio identical hormones? Would love to here some stories, what were yr worst symptoms? have yr symptoms got better? How long did it take?

  • @yensounta6501
    @yensounta6501 8 месяцев назад

    Wow! Can you link the study regarding the production of estrogen at the onset of brain damage? I can't seem to find that anywhere.

    • @yensounta6501
      @yensounta6501 8 месяцев назад +1

      at 14 minutes. I hope someone can link it

  • @CoralBalmoral
    @CoralBalmoral 9 месяцев назад +2

    So. Pathologise menopause and prescribe HRT. Just halfway through, so maybe there's more to come ...

    • @MrsHuntontheTrails
      @MrsHuntontheTrails 8 месяцев назад +8

      Life expectancy for women in 1850 (UK) was 42 years. It rose to 50 once all the infants that died were removed from the figures. In other words, women experienced menopause then they died. Being oestrogen deficient was the least of their worries. Women now (if they are fortunate enough to remain in good health) may experience 30 (or more) years of life beyond menopause. Being oestrogen deficient during these years increases the risk of life-limiting conditions including diabetes, osteoporosis and heart disease. We wouldn’t expect a type 1 diabetic (whose pancreas has stopped working) to live without the hormone insulin. Why is female hormone deficiency any different? The most important factor is getting the scientific information out there so people can make informed choices rather than sweeping statements based on hearsay and social media.

  • @ellenmeilee
    @ellenmeilee 5 месяцев назад +1

    Really needs to be OBE or something not only to recognise the amazing work but make the (probably more male) head honchos of the medical and pharma industries respect what she is saying. Unbelievable the gas lighting that goes on. I experienced it from my own (femalej NHS GP when I asked for testosterone to go with my standard NHS HRT and it was a hard no. She told me to try more sex toys which made me feel like it was my fault for being unsexy.

  • @Gilneth33
    @Gilneth33 3 месяца назад

    How long can you use testosterone for?

  • @Glutathione4Wellness
    @Glutathione4Wellness 11 месяцев назад +1

    I take hrt and gained weight? Any thoughts?

    • @iss8504
      @iss8504 10 месяцев назад +5

      You still have to watch your food. Go low carb

    • @crh251
      @crh251 10 месяцев назад +9

      I gained weight before HRT. We really have to watch the sugars and refined carbs even while on it. Our bodies are just not the same anymore. I put on 30 lbs. in perimenopause, and I’m working on losing it. It’s very stubborn, but I won’t give up.

    • @jessicahitchens6926
      @jessicahitchens6926 9 месяцев назад +6

      Intermittent fasting....

    • @crh251
      @crh251 9 месяцев назад

      @@jessicahitchens6926, I’ve been doing intermittent fasting for four years now. Unfortunately I’m still struggling. I just had my thyroid checked and was told it was off so I think that’s where my problem is.

  • @sharong8908
    @sharong8908 7 месяцев назад +1

    If a doctor is battleing the establishment, why?is it because of money having to be spend on womens health or wot

  • @EdelweisSusie
    @EdelweisSusie 3 месяца назад

    I'd beg to differ. Several of my friends who are 70+ have had NO menopausal symptoms AT ALL - NO hot flushes, NO weight gain etc and it's only when they got into their early 70's that they realised that menopause had been and gone! This is a strange podcast - Dr Louise tells people what the menopause is (!), what her experience is etc etc but not what we need to do to get through it if we don't want to go down the HRT route.

    • @julieellis6793
      @julieellis6793 2 месяца назад

      Yes, many don't have problems going through it, but from what I've read, those may be the ones who get dementia , heart attacks, or strokes. I would rather go peacefully.

  • @sharong8908
    @sharong8908 7 месяцев назад

    Hello csn your tell me wot a aura ring is,

  • @valeriewable6198
    @valeriewable6198 11 месяцев назад

    Just curious..what are you drinking?😊

  • @info3496
    @info3496 Год назад

    You have to do what you feel is best for yourself. I choose to go the natural route. I am post menopause, and am very happy I chose not to take HRT 6 women I knew chose HRT all died from Breast Cancer.

    • @lindseystanford808
      @lindseystanford808 11 месяцев назад +12

      The greatest risk for breast cancer is age, when we have reduced levels of oestrogen. Heart attacks and strokes increase substantially after the menopause because of the loss of our natural hormones!

    • @cearilindubhlaoi9507
      @cearilindubhlaoi9507 11 месяцев назад +2

      BHRT DOES NOT CAUSE BREAST CANCER. Its outdated thinking...
      Please do some research as BHRT is the safest option for optimal health.
      The natural route will not protect you from age diseases unfortunately...
      Our bones our heart our brains need estrogen, progesterone & testosterone that is a fact ...

    • @mavr1215
      @mavr1215 10 месяцев назад +13

      Well I know plenty of women who never took HRT who also died from breast cancer. There are many factors that contribute to the disease e.g. alcohol consumption, genetics, and lifestyle.
      Also, as a woman not having hormones could be considered unnatural. We have around 600 oestrogen receptors all over our bodies for a reason. It is far more natural to retain your hormones.

    • @info3496
      @info3496 10 месяцев назад

      @@mavr1215 3 of the 6 women I mentioned who died from it are my Aunts . Both of my father's sisters and the other was my mom's only sister My mom's sister was not going to take HRT but her stupid Doctor said if you don't take it for yourself take it for me , I would love to put my fist through that womens face. The cancer doctor confirmed it was the HRT. She should have lived a lot longer because on my mothers side of the family the women live into their hundreds There is no family history of breast cancer on either side of my family. Then there is my cousin in-law she died 2 months ago from breast cancer, yep she was on HRT she was in her 50s no family history. The other 2 women also in their 50s both on HRT were mothers to my daughters friends. So sad that these women died so young. That is why I won't take It ,my sisters won't and cousins who lost their mothers won't. I love living drug free. Because going the natural route is very freeing and good for my health, eat healthy and work out and stay off of drugs.

    • @aarya_ai
      @aarya_ai 10 месяцев назад +5

      They probably didn't take body identical oestrogen, which has a much lower risk of breast cancer

  • @geesehoward7261
    @geesehoward7261 2 месяца назад

    You gain weight because you put more food in your mouth than you burn in calories. End of story.