We have a responsibility to have those conversations. “The US study that prompted me to come off HRT has been considerably revised and HRT only increases the risk of breast cancer if you are already predisposed. "The feeling now is that for women who are having a menopausal symptoms - for most women - the benefits of HRT outweigh the risks. Medical advances are also making a huge difference to women’s experiences – and how they are seen to be dealing with it by those around them.Wark admits she was surprised by how much she learned during the making of the programme, particularly from Dr Heather Currie, chair of the British Menopause Society and consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist at Dumfries and Galloway Royal Infirmary in Scotland. If you missed it you can read all about it later in the magazine. She thinks women are still "shockingly ill-informed" about what it actually is and how to deal with it. © 2020 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. "Subsequent research suggests that the analysis of the data in the 2002 study was flawed and the findings were overstated.However, these positive reappraisals of HRT received nothing like the same publicity as the original scare.More up-to-date research has attempted to provide clarification of the risks involved. “We live in a far more tolerant society than our parents did,” she says. "We produce egg cells on average up to the late 40s and early 50s. Kirsty Wark, Menopause Cafe’s Patron. Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark has revealed she suffered a 'hard menopause' after abandoning HRT because of a study warning of its cancer risks.. Every angle is explored, with many women and one husband talking about loss of libido, weight gain, hair loss, joint pain and the almost unspeakable vaginal atrophy. "Hot flushes, night sweats, mood swings, loss of libido and vaginal dryness are all possible symptoms of the menopause and reasons why women do not often discuss it.For some women you can also add joint pains, dizzy spells and headaches.The majority of women experience the transition between the ages of 45 and 55 - with the average age being 51.Women usually go through the menopause in about four years but the range is up to about 12.Dr Heather Currie, chairwoman of the British Menopause Society, says: "Sadly our ovaries are only designed to last a certain number of years.

Kirsteen Anne "Kirsty" Wark FRSE (born 3 February 1955) is a Scottish journalist, newsreader and television presenter, best known for fronting BBC Two's news and current affairs programme Newsnight since 1993, and its weekly arts spin-off Newsnight Review (later The Review Show) from 2002 to 2014. “Look how far we have come with issues like gender and disability; menopause is more openly discussed and therefore better understood now.”It is a sentiment echoed in India Knight’s book, where she writes: “There’s a whole third of life to go. We have 1 episodes of Kirsty Wark: The Menopause And Me in our archive. It’s also useful as a reminder that times change – everyone recognises the classic image of menopausal women as witch-like harridans exhibiting seriously odd behaviour – and that the modern menopausal women is more likely to be leading a busy and satisfying life.Many confident, articulate women are now talking and writing about the menopause, with Many women live a third of their lives post-menopausal, often at the peak of their careers and still with big plans. Much better to work with nature, harness and feel rejuvenated by its power. At the heart of the programme is frank and often funny testimony from famous and not-so-famous women, including Jennifer Saunders and Kaye Adams, while highly respected experts including the chair of the British Menopause Society give up-to-date advice.Kirsty also investigates groundbreaking research at Edinburgh University - research which has the provocative potential to extend our fertility.

Kirsty Wark went through the menopause at 47 Credit: Andrew Crowley Kirsty Wark; 14 February 2017 • 8:00pm. Kirsty Wark: The Menopause And Me is a TV show on British national television from BBC1 with an average rating of 3.0 stars by TelevisionCatchUp.co.uk's visitors.

Follow. "One of the consequences of a lack of oestrogen can be osteoporosis, a condition in which the bones become brittle and fragile.It has recently been estimated that by the age of 70, half of all women will have had a fracture related to osteoporosis.Prof Mary Anne Lumsden, professor of medical education and gynaecology at the University of Glasgow, says: "Many of us are of a generation who have watched our mothers experience the effects of osteoporosis with multiple fractures and decreased mobility, a loss of confidence. Regardless of your age, you need to know what … These are external links and will open in a new windowBBC news presenter Kirsty Wark began her menopause at the age of 47 after having a hysterectomy. Newsnight star Kirsty Wark went through 'hard menopause' due to breast cancer fears NEWSNIGHT'S Kirsty Wark has admitted to having a "hard menopause" after abandoning HRT due to a … "I came off HRT and actually my symptoms have not really gone away in the past 10 years.