Your Menopause Masterclass Pt 2: How to Lose Belly Fat, Sleep Better & Stop Suffering Now! Dr. Mary Claire Haver
88 min
•Jan 6, 20265 months agoSummary
Dr. Mary Claire Haver, a board-certified menopause specialist, discusses the three critical hormones (estrogen, progesterone, testosterone) that change during perimenopause and menopause, explaining why 9 out of 10 doctors misdiagnose hormone-related symptoms as mental health issues. The episode covers hormone replacement therapy options, risks versus benefits, and practical strategies for finding affordable treatment and building a personalized menopause toolkit.
Insights
- Millions of women are being treated for anxiety, depression, and other conditions when the underlying cause is hormonal imbalance—a diagnostic gap driven by insufficient medical training on menopause
- Bioidentical hormone replacement therapy using FDA-approved transdermal options (patches, creams, gels) offers safer cardiovascular profiles than oral estrogen by avoiding hepatic processing and clotting factor increases
- The 2002 Women's Health Initiative study vastly overstated breast cancer risks from HRT while underreporting cardiovascular and bone protection benefits, creating a 20-year treatment avoidance that harmed women's long-term health
- Visceral abdominal fat accumulation in menopause is driven by estrogen loss and inflammation, not willpower or lifestyle failure—a critical reframing that reduces shame and enables targeted treatment
- Compounded hormone medications lack FDA oversight and show up to 30% discrepancy between labeled and actual dosages, making FDA-approved bioidentical options safer and more reliable for most patients
Trends
Telemedicine menopause clinics are scaling affordable, insurance-accepting care to address the shortage of trained specialists in traditional healthcare systemsPatient-driven education and advocacy are forcing systemic change, with women bringing medical guidelines to doctors to initiate conversations previously gatekept by physician knowledge gapsFunctional medicine and preventative health frameworks are gaining credibility in menopause care, though integration with traditional medical standards remains fragmentedGender health equity gap is widening: women live 45 years longer than men but spend 25% of that in poorer health, driving demand for preventative hormone therapy and lifestyle interventionsCompounding pharmacy regulation is becoming a consumer safety issue, with FDA audits revealing quality control failures that are pushing patients toward FDA-approved alternativesSymptom misattribution in perimenopause is creating cascading medication burdens, with women on multiple drugs for depression, anxiety, and cardiac symptoms that resolve with hormone therapy aloneTestosterone therapy for women is moving beyond libido into off-label use for mood, muscle mass, and frailty prevention, despite lack of FDA approval and controlled substance restrictionsInsurance coverage gaps are creating a two-tiered menopause care system where wealthy patients access comprehensive hormone therapy while lower-income women are limited to symptom management
Topics
Perimenopause and menopause hormone changes (estradiol, progesterone, testosterone)Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) types and delivery methods (patches, creams, gels, pills, pellets, rings)Bioidentical versus synthetic hormone formulations and safety profilesWomen's Health Initiative study reanalysis and cardiovascular protection windowsGenital urinary syndrome of menopause (GSM) and vaginal estrogen therapyVisceral fat accumulation and metabolic changes in menopauseBrain fog, dementia risk, and cognitive decline in perimenopauseVasomotor symptoms (hot flashes, palpitations) and cardiac healthSleep disturbance and progesterone supplementationBone health and osteoporosis prevention with HRTCompounded versus FDA-approved hormone medications and quality controlTelemedicine menopause clinics and affordability strategiesMenopause Society certification and provider vettingTestosterone therapy for sexual desire and muscle massInsurance coverage and out-of-pocket cost reduction tactics
Companies
Menopause Society
Provides certified provider directory and clinical guidelines for hormone therapy that patients can bring to doctors
Mary Claire Wellness Clinic
Dr. Haver's private menopause specialty clinic offering comprehensive hormone testing and personalized treatment prot...
HRT Club
Telemedicine platform offering affordable hormone therapy access with coupon and cost-reduction services
GoodRx
Prescription discount platform used to reduce out-of-pocket costs for hormone replacement medications
Tulane University
Institution where Dr. Haver obtained certification in culinary medicine specialist training
People
Dr. Mary Claire Haver
Board-certified OB-GYN and menopause specialist; author of 'The New Menopause'; founder of Mary Claire Wellness Clinic
Jamie Kern Lima
Podcast host and founder of IT Cosmetics; interviewer conducting menopause masterclass discussion
Howard Hodis
Researcher credited with reanalyzing Women's Health Initiative data to clarify cardiovascular benefits of HRT
Wendy Mack
Researcher who contributed to WHI reanalysis showing cardiovascular protection windows for hormone therapy
Roger Lobo
Clinician and researcher who helped reanalyze WHI data to clarify HRT risks and benefits by age cohort
Dr. Rosio Salas-Wyland
Triple-boarded physician in obesity medicine, endocrinology, and internal medicine; menopause expert and colleague
Oprah Winfrey
Referenced for publicly sharing her menopause palpitations experience, helping normalize cardiac symptoms
Melinda French Gates
Quoted in podcast introduction praising Jamie Kern Lima's interviewing style and presence
Quotes
"Nine out of ten doctors don't even get this right. So many women have symptoms when their hormones are off that might look like mental health things, anxiety... but we never get our test done to go, wait a minute, is it that my hormones are off that are causing these other things?"
Dr. Mary Claire Haver•Early in episode
"You deserve better than that. She has to literally go through incredible mazes and hoops to find someone who will even talk to her about it. And that is the problem."
Dr. Mary Claire Haver•Mid-episode
"If you feel great and your quality of life is not affected, you're good, but that's not most women. You know, most women there is something not right. If you're like, I'm not my best self and I deserve to be. Like something's off."
Dr. Mary Claire Haver•Mid-episode
"I'm living my best life. I get up every morning excited. I feel better than I did in my 30s and 40s. I have better relationships. I have better boundaries. I'm a better business woman. I'm a better doctor. I'm a better mother. I'm a better wife. I'm having better sex."
Dr. Mary Claire Haver•Late episode
"In life, you don't sort the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self-worth. When you build your self-worth, you change your entire life."
Jamie Kern Lima•Closing segment
Full Transcript
You've asked for it. Actually, you pretty much demanded it. So back by popular demand, one of the top menopause doctors in the world. Dr. Mary Claire Haver is here in this part to menopause master class episode where we're tackling your changing hormones and hormone replacement therapy. We are going there with everything you want and need to know and whether today you're listening for yourself or because someone you love shared this episode with you, I want to welcome you to the Jamie Currie and we miss out podcast family. Can you explain our key hormones and which ones change and what that means for us? In Perry, menopause, that whole system goes chaos. And then in postmenopause, estrogen and projostrum flatline to almost undetectable levels. With the average age of menopause, defined by, the day you stop menstruating 46 to 55 and seven to 10 years before that, we enter Perry menopause and our hormones start going, hey, why are one of the biggest, biggest, brand new pieces of information for so many people that you say nine out of 10 doctors, don't even get this right. So many women have symptoms when their hormones are off that might look like mental health things, anxiety. It could be, you know, a load of, loading, sleep disturbance, weight gain, heart issue and then we go and we get that thing treated. But we never get our test done to go, wait a minute, is it that my hormones are off that are causing these other things? And so we have, I'm gonna guess millions and millions of people being treated for symptom. You're right, on multiple medications, wins, you know, no one knew enough to say, let's do some blood work to rule out. So let me walk you through the patient experience. We put out the fire of her menopause first, with hormone therapy. Estrogen, progesterone, testosterone. For someone who's like, I've never had mine checked. Right now, 1.2 billion women are in perimenopause, are menopause and whether or not you're experiencing this personally in your life right now, I guarantee you someone in your life is. I wanna break this down for exactly what we should do because there's a number of people that can only afford to go through insurance. So many women in my life wouldn't have the courage to aggressively ask a question. You say 9 out of 10 doctors probably don't understand hormones or hormone replacement therapy. So they might be getting advice on a symptom but not actually on the cause. Those three hormones, estrogen, I know you call it estradiol, that's estrogen, right? Same right? Okay, estrogen, progesterone, testosterone. Look, why should she care and what do we do? I mean, if you feel great and your quality of life is not affected, you're good, but that's not most women. You know, most women there is something not right. If you're like, I'm not my best self and I deserve to be. Like something's off. Something is off. You're wonderful OB-GYN, you're wonderful family medicine doctor who has done incredible care might not know enough to be able to help you or not know how. You deserve better than that. How to find a doctor who takes insurance, how to find online providers, 30% of women will have palpitations as a symptom of their menopause. Then we have visceral fat, the intradominal fat that wraps around our organs. All of this could be preventable. A healthy libido that that is suddenly gone. Hormone replacement therapy. I remember people saying hormonal placement therapy can cause cancer. What's, yeah, ameth, what's the truth? What is it? Okay. Myth number one. Can you explain the difference between bioidentical hormonal placement therapy? Not every woman will choose hormone therapy or is a candidate to be clear. But she's not getting the choice. No one's having the conversation with her by and large. She has to literally go through incredible mazes and hoops to find someone who will even talk to her about it. And that is the problem. That's where we're feeling women. When a woman walks into her doctor, what does she need to ask? Those three questions you listed are huge. I want everyone to pause the episode, rewind it, write those questions down, share this episode with every girl and woman right now. I'm thinking about the woman right now who maybe her insurance covers very few doctors. And she's trying to figure out what do I do? Would it be wise to first? Another trick which has worked. Two things. So everyone pause the episode, rewind, write that down, write that down, bring it into your doctor. I love preventative stuff. I love it. So love it. What options are there exactly? Thank you. Or hormone replacement therapy. We have so many what ones you use right now. How you apply them. Who's a candidate? Who's not? You put a cream in your vagina. Yep. Yes. For physical therapy, most women have no idea it even exists and it is literally the best thing. Women deserve that conversation. We have great studies showing safety and efficacy of topical estrogen for the skin. Is it covered by insurance? Things have to be FDA approved to be covered by insurance. Now you can get it for the vagina and some women are choosing to put a little on their face. On their face. And it's actually wonderful for women who have urgency and frequency. So they have to pee a lot. You know, this is a new thing. And do you personally use vaginal estri? I do. I started having delayed orgasms. Then I started having to get up to pee again in the middle of the night. I tell that story and not to embarrass myself, but to be like, I didn't even realize it was still too taboo. Is there something you can use that speeds up orgasm? Huh. I'm telling you right now we are not getting the sympho from our doctor. You use the patch. What do all of those typically cost? Now I'm going to go into how we find cubons. Let me be clear. You can be healthy without hormone therapy. But it is harder. You clearly say for you. And you've been very definitive about who's a candidate, who's not that the rewards can far outweigh the risk. I'm living my best life. I get up every morning excited. I feel better than I did in my 30s and 40s. I have better relationships. I have better boundaries. I'm a better business woman. I'm a better doctor. I'm a better mother. I'm a better wife. I'm having better sex. You know, I want everyone to have this. Whether you're a man or a woman, menopause is going to affect you because it's going to affect 54 cents of our society. Right now, whether you or someone you love is experiencing parry menopause, which can start at 30 or even younger, or menopause, which can typically start in your 40s, 50s or 60s. There is so much conflicting information about the subject. So few doctors are well trained. And there are so many things our mothers didn't tell us or even know about it. And it's time that you feel informed about what's going on with your body, your brain, and your hormones. Today is your menopause master class. And you're going to lead this episode with your own menopause toolkit equipped with the info and tools you need that I know are going to impact your life today, whether it's how to sleep better, understand what's a menopause myth and what's the truth. Lose belly fat or stop suffering finally. My guest today, many call her the top menopause doctor on the planet. Dr. Mary Claire Haver is going to take us from feeling powerless to powerful on everything your doctor forgot to mention on topics, including the exact tests you need to ask your doctor for during your next visit, the three stages of menopause what's actually happening in your body on your changing hormones on hormone replacement therapy, including the risks versus the benefits. Should you do it? How and when on belly fat and weight gain linked to menopause and what you can do about it right now. And on the surprising symptoms happening to so many women that go untreated and overlooked by the majority of doctors who just aren't as well informed as they could be. Today is a master class from the master of menopause herself. Dr. Mary Claire Haver is aboard certified obstetrics and gynecology specialist and certified menopause practitioner from the menopause society. She's also a certified culinary medicine specialist from Tulane University, a best selling author of multiple books, including her brand new book, The New Menopause. She's also the founder of the Mary Claire Wellness Clinic. She's a mom of two, a wife and a woman on a mission who says that while menopause is inevitable, suffering doesn't have to be. And she is here to help you and me today. I love a truly life changing episode. I am so excited for this one today, whether you're listening for yourself or because someone that you love shared this episode with you, I want to welcome you to the Gene Kermey Michelle podcast family. And today we are shedding light on everything your doctor forgot to mention to you about menopause. And for everybody new to this episode, can you do me a favor? If you like the show and the guests that I bring you, please hit the subscribe or follow button on the app you're listening or watching on. It truly means a world to me and thank you. And I want to remind you, this episode is not just for you and me, please share this with every single woman that you know, because what you are about to hear will change your life and hers. Welcome to Jamie Kermey Liemeshau. Oprah, how have you defied the mind? Her show is unlike any I've ever done. A revelation. When you listen, it feels like a hug, but your brain and your spirit and your heart is like, wow, Melinda French Gates. When I look into Jamie's eyes, I feel like I am on some other cosmic level with her. I could see the light around her. She's infused with light. Imagine overcoming self-doubt, learning to believe in yourself and trust yourself and know you are enough. Welcome to the Jamie Kermey Liemeshau. Jamie Kermey Liemesh, her name. Everybody needs Jamie Kermey Liemesh in their life. Jamie Kermey Liemeshau. Jamie Kermey Liemeshau. Jamie Kermey Liemeshau. When we talk about hormones, okay? This is going to be a brand new topic for a lot of people. It's not part of the thing they maybe tend to focus on in their day-to-day life. For every girl and woman listening in particular, can you explain our key hormones and which ones change and what that means for us? Sure. So in the female human body, actually men and women have the same sex hormones. We just have different levels. So men have estrogen, women have estrogen, men have testosterone, women have testosterone. We actually, females have four times the amount of testosterone than we do estradiol when we're in our reproductive years. Testosterone is the precursor for estrogen and that testosterone gets an enzyme attached to it that flips over a carboxyl chain and turns it into estradiol. So without testosterone, we would not have estradiol in our body. So women think of testosterone typically as a male hormone, but it's actually one of the most important hormones in our body as well. And then we have progesterone, which so in a normal menstrual cycle when we're ovulating regularly and we're having this ebb and flow of hormones, we have hormone start out low. So you start your period, that's day one, okay? Hormones estrogen and progesterone start out low and then we see a rise in our estradiol level towards ovulation, then it drops down again and then we have a second little bump towards the end of the 28 day cycle. And then in the second half, after we ovulate, we see that spike in progesterone and that goes repeats itself month after month after month. And for some women, even that fluctuation that we normally have can be kind of devastating with pre-missile dysploric disorder, with cramps, with headaches, lots of things can kind of affect women, but most women can manage it. No problem. Thank God we have treatment therapies for when your ebb and flow is causing problems in your life. We can help you with it. We've gotten pretty good at that. In perimenopause, that whole system goes chaos, right? Estardial level is bouncing around, like you have this roller coaster effect on the way down till you completely lose your eggs for both estrogen and progesterone. And then in postmenopause, estrogen and progesterone flatline to almost undetectable levels and that FSH and LH from the brain stay high for the rest of our lives, which is how we diagnose menopause or postmenopause. So that's kind of it in a nutshell. In that nutshell. And I know big picture zooming out, and this can vary, woman by woman, it can vary based on a number of factors, but with the average age of menopause, defined by, the day you stop menstruating for a year, right? That day can range 46 to 55 normal curve when we enter menopause. And then seven to 10 years before that, we enter perimenopause. And when our estrogen can start decreasing or surge or plateau and our hormone start going, hey, why are one of the biggest, biggest, brand new pieces of information for so many people that you say nine out of 10 doctors don't even get this right. It's so newly being talked about. You talk about this in detail in your book, and you menopause. This is such a big thing that so many women have symptoms when their hormones are off that might look like mental health anxiety. It could be, you know, low-dating, sleep disturbance, weight gain, heart issue. I mean, the number of symptoms, and then we go and we get that thing treated, but we never get our test done to go, wait a minute, is it that my hormones are off that are causing these other things? And so we have, I'm gonna guess millions and millions of people being treated for symptom. You're right. On multiple medications, wins, you know, no one knew enough to say, let's try, let's do some blood work to rule out. So when a patient comes to my clinic, let me walk you through the patient experience. Now again, I have a, I've stepped away from the insurance model so that I'm not gonna be told by an insurance company what I can and can't do because they don't recognize menopause really. Medicare doesn't even have a menopause code. Okay, if you realize this. So I get to practice medicine the way I want to and I need to. I spend an hour with my first patient, you know, with each new patient getting to the bottom of it. You know, we've done a ton of paperwork beforehand and I do a lot of blood work. But if she's in parimenopause, knowing that that's a huge chaotic hormonal zone, I'm not, you know, depends on what day, what time of the day, where she is, it's not gonna be really be diagnostic for me. It's wonderful for postmenopause because we know high FSH low estrogen, she's there. Okay, but in parry, I'm ruling out autoimmune disease, nutritional deficiencies, you know, a lot of these symptoms can be caused by other diseases. I wanna make sure I'm not missing anything. And my clinic, I've diagnosed lupus, I've diagnosed iron deficiency, vitamin D deficiency and 80% of my patients. And so I'm, you know, making sure she's optimized. So we put out the fire of her menopause first, with hormone therapy, okay. Now in parimenopause, we have two options. We can either override the system with something like a birth control pill or the doses high enough in a birth control pill that is depressed the occasional ovulation and tell the brain shut down, we're good, which is how birth control pills work. And there's problems there and we can talk about that. Or we support, give her menopause hormone therapy doses, which in our clinic are bioidentical. So we're giving her just estradiol and progesterone, the exact same thing her ovaries used to make, feeding back to the brain, telling it to calm down. Calm down, it's okay. We've got some estrogen on board. Don't send these crazy signals to the ovaries. Not enough to, so you're still kind of doing what you're doing in the background, but we seem to be taking away the drama out of it. We're seeing the mental health challenges getting better, the brain fog clearing up, the sleep is improving, especially with progesterone. And then in postmenopause, it's actually easier to treat because you're starting from scratch. When in parimenopause, we're trying to pin the tail on a moving donkey. Remember, because there's all kind of chaos going on. So your hormones, estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, for someone listening right now, who's like, huh, I've never had mine checked. And I've gone into my doctor, I'm 45 or 55 or 35. I've gone in with these other kind of symptoms happening. I've gotten treatment or medication for them, but actually I wonder what if the underlying issue is actually, what is she? My hormones. So I want to break this down for exactly what we should do, because there's a number of people that can only afford to go through insurance. There's also people who are trying to figure out how do I get free resources and learn more about this. There's also so many of us. I've had this experience very recently, actually. But anyway, it was an unrelated type of a doctor appointment, but I watched as the doctor was in and out so fast. He must have been in the room under 60 seconds. And I'm not shy anymore. So I will keep asking questions, and he had no time. And I just remember thinking to myself, so many even women in my life wouldn't have the courage to aggressively ask a question, because we were like, okay, okay, and then we don't. So I think of everyone listening who's in all types of situations, like how with her doctor, what are her best thoughts? She can't afford to go to someone where it's out of pocket, things like that. So just starting zoomed way out, can you share just top level? Yeah. Why should she care about where those three hormones are at? Yeah. And especially estrogen, how it can impact every part of her health, mental health, physical health, even though you say 9 out of 10 doctors probably don't understand hormones or hormone replacement therapy. So they might be getting advice on a symptom, but not actually on the cause. Why exactly should she care, and everyone listening care about those three hormones, estrogen, I know you call it estradiol, that's estrogen, right? Same thing, okay, estrogen, progesterone, testosterone. Look, why should she care, and what do we do? I mean, if you feel great, and your quality of life is not affected, and you are not having crazy hemorrhagic periods, or you know, you're good, but that's not most women. You know, most women there is something not right, at least in my clinic and in my experience, and the people who follow me on social media. So if you're one of those women out there, and you were like, I'm not my best self, and I deserve to be. Like something's off. Something is off. Unfortunately, this is probably big problem why we're not diagnosing paramanopause is one, we weren't taught anything about it, and two, we don't have a great blood test. It takes someone who can rule out other overlapping causes, and then realize based on her symptoms, this constellation of symptoms, this most likely is paramanopause, let's do a trial of treatment and see how you feel. See what gets better, and then go from there, okay? How do you find that unicorn? Because you're wonderful OB-GYN, you're wonderful family medicine doctor, who has done incredible care, might not know enough to be able to help you, or not know how, and just be under the assumption, this is just what women go through, you'll be fine in a couple of years. You deserve better than that. So the menopause society has a list of certified providers on their website. It's not perfect, but it is a definite place to start. We have a resource for our patients online, called the Menopause Empowerment Guide. It's a 14-page PDF completely free, with how to find a doctor, who takes insurance, how to find online provider. So this is a really kind of niche thing, I think is pretty cool. There are some very affordable online telemedicine clinics that have been built, and I've gotten to befriend them. I'll pay me to say all this stuff, but I am friendly with them because I vetted what they do to make sure, this comes out of my mouth, that it's legit, and I'm not gonna hurt a woman who's seeking help, but if you can't find anyone in your community, there are wonderful telemedicine options that are very affordable and midi take insurance, that are built simply to serve the woman in period menopause and menopause, and to help you determine if you're a candidate for a trial of hormone therapy, and see how you feel from there. If we're deficient estrogen, can you talk about, because I think this is a huge revelation for so many people, estrogen can impact almost every organ system in your body. Can you share with us if we are out of balance and estrogen? What are some of the common things that can impact? Sure. So quality of life issues, brain fog, risk of dementia increasing, but the immediate things, brain fog to where you don't feel like, you feel like you're developing dementia, you feel like you're developing dementia, you are worried about your job at work, you are not functioning normally, okay? And you are waking up scared, that's something's wrong with you. That's the most extreme form. Mental health challenges that are extremely affecting your life, your relationships, your ability to function, you deserve to not have that happen to you, okay? Palpitations, let's go to the heart. Palpitations, Oprah Winfrey tells a fabulous story, bad for her, but you know, extremely liberating for women who willize that happened to me. We now know that vasomotor symptoms include palpitations, that 30% of women will have palpitations as a symptom of their menopause. You go to the cardiologist, you get your full workup, everything looks normal, you deserve a workup. But then they're like, well, that's just what you're going through. When I tell you the percentage of women whose palpitations are completely gone by replacing her hormones is incredible. Liver, most women's cholesterol, with no changes in diet and exercise, will go, their LDLs will shoot up, their HDLs will drop a little, and their total cholesterol numbers will increase. And they have done nothing different, and it is absolutely shocking to them. That this is happening. Outside of familial hypercholesterolemia, that's a different thing. But this is a woman who always had normal cholesterol. And then all of a sudden, somewhere in her late 30s and 40s, you see this sudden uptick, and every time she goes back, it's higher, higher, higher. And she's following all the dietary guides and she's doing everything she should, but it was her menopause that caused this. New onset of pre-diabetes. Never had an issue with your blood sugars before, all of a sudden, in perimenopause. And all of these are leading to the increasing risk. Like before menopause, women enjoy much lower risk of cardiovascular disease than men. And through the menopause transition, we pass them up, and our risks go up. And then we have visceral fat, which is cosmetically distressing, and no woman likes it. But visceral fat, the intradominal fat, that wraps around our organs. My patients used to come into me for their well-women exams and grab their tummies in their little paper gowns and say, what is this? I never had this. And I would say, we need to pause for a super brief break. And while we do, take a moment to share this episode with every single woman that you know, because this information can truly change your life and hers. In life, you don't sort level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self-worth. When you build your self-worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy. How to believe you are enough and transform your life for you. If you have some self-doubt to destroy and a destiny to fulfill, Worthy is for you. And Worthy, you'll learn proven tools and its simple steps that bring life-changing results, like how to get unstuck from the things holding you back. Build unshakable self-love. Unlearn the lies that lead to self-doubt and embrace the truths that wake up worthiness. Overcome limiting beliefs and imposter syndrome. Achieve your hopes and dreams by believing you are worthy of them and so much more. Are you ready to unleash your greatness and step into the person you are born to be? Imagine a life with zero self-doubt and unshakable self-worth. Get your copy of Worthy, plus some amazing thank you bonus gifts for you at Worthybook.com or the link in the show notes below. Imagine what you do if you fully believed in you. It's time to find out with Worthy. Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious and so is self-belief. And I love to hang out with you even more, especially, if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter that's also a love letter to you. Deliver straight to your inbox each and every Tuesday morning from me. If you haven't signed up to make sure that you get it each week, just go to jameycurnleema.com to make sure you're on the list and you'll get your one-on-one with Jamie Weekly newsletter and get ready to believe in you. If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration, some tips, tools, joy, and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. Subscribe at jameycurnleema.com or in the link in the show notes. Do you struggle with negative self-talk? Living with a constant mental narrative that you're not good enough is exhausting. I know because I spent most of my life in that habit. The words you say to yourself about yourself are so powerful and when you learn to take control over your self-talk, it's life-changing. And I wanted to give you a free resource that I created for you if this is something that could benefit your life. It's called Five Ways to Overcome Negative Self-Talk and Build Self Love. And it's a free how-to guide to overcome that negative self-talk to build confidence and develop unshakable self-love so that you can dream big and keep going in the pursuit of your goals. Don't let self-sabotaging thoughts hinder your progress any longer. It's time to rewrite the script of your life when filled with self-love, resilience, and unwavering belief. If you're ready to take charge of your narrative, build unwavering confidence and empower yourself to persevere on the path to your dreams, you can grab your free guide to stop overthinking and learn to trust yourself at jameycurnlima.com slash resources or click the link in the show notes below. And now more of this incredible conversation together. My patients used to come into me for their well-women exams and grab their tummies in their little paper gowns and say, what is this? I never had this. And I would say, oh, park further, take the stairs, eat less, work out more. Because that was what I was taught to do. I had no idea that the loss of estrogen was driving, was increasing inflammation and driving fat to the abdomen. You know, women with debilitating musculoskeletal pain, 80% of us will have a change, you know, musculoskeletal pain. And for like 30% of them, it's their worst menopause symptom. It's debilitating. They're not able to work out and exercise and do the things that they used to do because of this. All of this could be preventable. And what I think of cortisol levels, of what we've put a whole generation of women through, gaslighting them, not recognizing the constellation of symptoms that could be related to menopause, and what that is done to their shame and their guilt and their worry and all the things that drive up our cortisol levels. Because we weren't advocates in their care. We weren't holding their hands through the process. Even if she chooses not to have hormone therapy, wouldn't it be nice to know? To know. Because that this would happen. I just don't have willpower. I've let myself go. Yeah. And that's the shame. And like, you know, the change in libido. Yeah. And how the guilt she feels around that, especially for a woman who enjoyed what she felt was a healthy relationship and a healthy libido that that is suddenly gone. And she doesn't care that it's gone. And it's dramatically affecting some relationships. Like, all of this is treatable. All of this is part of this. What's happening in our bodies and in our brains? From this transition. And yes, it's natural, but it doesn't mean it's not pathologic. And that you have to live with it. And I want to call out that of all those symptoms you just listed, you didn't even say hot flashes, right? And some of us, that's the only thing we ever hear. What are the greatest things about these telemedicine companies is women go to their sites to get information and they'll take a little quiz. Could I be a metapositor? They are collecting data by the hundreds of thousands. So ever now, one of the companies, my daughter actually, in turn, for them last year, which is why I know this, they, over 100,000 women, and they said, what are your worst symptoms? And they went through the, you know, they included all the ones in the book, right? And hot flashes was like number six or seven on severity and frequency. And how much it affected their lives. I mean, my hot flashes were debilitating, which is what, you know, drug me reluctantly to take hormone therapy. But, you know, oh my gosh, it was fatigue, sleep disturbance, depression, loss of libido, relationship issues, like all of this stuff that no one was teaching, no one, you know, very few are still being taught, that this could be a symptom of a metapositor, especially a woman who had it. She was great. She was living her life. She had stress, but she had it managed. It was all good. She was, you know, she wasn't living her best life. And then all of a sudden, it gets pulled out from under her. And no one is helping her through this. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Can you share Dr. Mary Claire Haver, what is hormone replacement therapy? What is bioidentical hormone replacement therapy? We're going to go deep on all the forms of it, the perceived risks, right? Sure. There are risks. And there has been sort of this thing that's been out there in the universe since, I mean, I remember this as like a teenager, right? Like a long time ago, I remember people saying, oh, you know, hormone replacement therapy can cause cancer, I mean, all of that. So can you talk about what's, yeah. A myth, what's the truth? What is it? Okay. Who needs it? Myth number one, it's dangerous for most women. Absolutely untrue. Myth number two, it's only for hot flashes. And severe hot flashes at that. By the way, who gets to determine if they're severe? Not me. That's you, the patient, right? Number three, oh, there's so many that you have to do compounded to get bioidentical. We have wonderful, safe, efficacious, affordable bioidentical hormone therapy for 25, 30 bucks a month. And number four, it's expensive, very, very, very affordable for most women. So if you go to a clinician who's willing to help you find the right pharmacy, I spend a lot of time shopping pharmacies with my patients to get the best deal, but that pharmacy benefit managers is a whole nother, but we do a lot of work in our clinic to help patients find affordable hormone therapy. That it's just estrogen or just progesterone or just testosterone and not some kind of mixture of the three that you can't talk about one without the other. I think that's another big myth. And hormone replacement therapy is basically supplementing your body's hormones that are deficient. Supplementing or replacing or replacing. Can you explain the difference between bioidentical hormone replacement therapy? Yeah. So when, let's go back in history, when estrogen compounds were first being developed, they were mostly synthetic. They were made in labs, you know, chemists and white coats cooking up things and cleaving different compounds to create these products. And so the number one ingredient in birth control pills on the estrogen side of things. So let's go high level. We have estrogen, we have progesterogens, which includes progesterone, and then we have androgens, which include testosterone. Right? And for each of those, we have body identical meaning pretty much looks like exactly what we have in the body. Or then we have other options that are non identical, but still bind to the receptor. The body identical ones tend to be plant based. And the chemical ones tend to be synthetically made. That's kind of high level. For what we have commercially available in the US for birth control, and this is a big pharma problem, and I hate to demonize pharma, you know, the pharmaceutical industry, but this is one place I'm not that happy, is that the only thing really commercially available, and I took them for years, is synthetic options. Why don't we have a bioidentical option? Why don't we have an estradiol and progesterone containing dose for suppressing ovulations that you don't get pregnant? Because when we suppress ovulation, we also suppress heavy bleeding, acne, a lot of other things. You know, why do we have to go with a synthetic option for that? Okay? But then when we move over to menopause hormone therapy, dosing, it's much lower than what's in birth control pill. So when we think about birth control pills, we're developed to stop, not get pregnant, and you need a high dose to do that, and the only reason why hormone therapy was developed was to stop a hot flash. We need to stop hot flashes, that is menopause, how much do we need to stop a hot flash? And then those formulations, now modern formulations tend to be estradiol and progesterone. Now that doesn't work for everyone, and what I want to make clear to your audience is not every woman will choose hormone therapy or is a candidate to be clear. But she's not getting the choice. No one's having the conversation with her by and large. She has to literally go through incredible mazes and hoops to find someone who will even talk to her about it. And that is the problem. She needs to be able to make that decision for herself after consultation with a clinician who's educated, and that's where we're feeling, women. Right now, when a woman walks into her doctor, what does she need to ask? Before you even hit the door, don't make the appointment until you have asked these questions. Is this clinician willing to discuss hormone therapy with me? What percentage of patients receive hormone therapy? If it's 100%, that's a red flag. If it's less than 25%, that's probably another big red flag. And are you going to offer me all of my options? Or are you going to steer me towards one product? That's a red flag. So one of the commercially available products that has compounded is something called pellets. And in my world, in clinicians, I trust, you know, we have our little menopause. It's a cute name for just a group of docs who we're constantly chatting all day on WhatsApp across the world. What are you doing with this? What do you know? We're a think tank. And by and large, we are not fans of pellets because one, they're not, we know, I think we can do better for our patients. But a lot of clinicians, that is all they're offering. And I think that's an ethical red flag. I think that you, if you decide that pellets are best for you, that's your choice. But if you're not given all of your options, remember that your clinician is profiting off of the sale of those pellets. And they have a financial drive to push that towards you. Is the clinician profiting off all the different options? No, just some. Just some. The ones that they only recommend some in some cases. I mean, think about the economics of it. They're going to make a lot more money by giving them something that they're going to insert in the office. Those three questions you listed are huge. I want everyone to pause the episode, rewind it, write those questions down, share this episode with every girl and woman right now. Ask her to write those three questions down. So call ahead. Ask those questions. Yes, yes. Now, I want to ask you this because I want to get just really specific here. Do you call your regular doctor, meaning maybe your doctor that has your physical every year? Or which doctor do you ask for a referral to you? I wish I could tell you that you could walk into every OBGYN's office. Yes. It's not happening. Okay. Go to the Men of Health Society. Look on their website for someone who certified. It's not perfect, but it is a place to start. Then ask those questions. On our website, I have a crowdsource database of women who've had fabulous experiences with their clinicians. And we organize their testimonials by city and state. That's another place to start. There are, and it's getting bigger and it's getting faster, telemedicine options. You know, we're getting there. Yeah, and we're going to link to all of those. I want to make sure everyone knows that in the show notes. We're going to link to all of those as well as Dr. Mary Claire Havers, sites and books and all the stuff. I'm thinking about the woman right now who maybe her insurance covers very few doctors. And she's trying to figure out what do I do? Would it be wise to first call, let's say you only see one doctor a year, and maybe you also go and get your past, Mary Claire, and her gynecologist? Would it be wise to call those two first? Call ahead first. Another trick which has worked. Two things. One is on our website, we have the Menopause Society guidelines for hormone therapy in a PDF that you can just print out. Print it out, bring it to your doctor. Bring it to your doctor. You may be able to teach them. It's not guaranteed, but it has worked. And the second is say, hey, let me try this for three months. I'll come back and tell you how I'm doing. And these poor physicians, clinicians, nurse practitioners are so overwhelmed, so overworked. Their situations are not great. They have no time. And they'll be like, I tell you, they'll be like, okay, try it. And now you're going to educate them. You're going to come back in three months, and I promise you the vast majority of you are going to feel amazing. And you're going to tell them, this works so beautifully for me. Thank you so much. And they're going to remember that. And maybe read that guideline, or take five minutes to educate themselves, or get inspired to go and take the, you know, go get educated by the Menopause Society. Should you ask a referality and endocrinologist? Maybe. Those are getting better as well. But a lot of endocrinologists tend to work in niches of like thyroid, or, you know, whatever the area of specialty is. You would think, you know, Dr. Rosio Salas-Wyland, one of my dear friends, who is a triple-borted and obesity medicine and endocrinology and internal medicine, she did three and two fellowships on top of her residency, said she learned, you know, she's the expert, and how little clinically relevant information that she got, and how we've all had to bring ourselves up to speed to be able to really give the best advice for a woman in Menopause. When you say nine out of ten doctors aren't trained, and don't have the knowledge or get hormone replacement therapy wrong, I just want to call that out because for everyone listening, there's a very good chance you're going to call your doctor. You're going to proactive and say, no, it's dangerous or no, it's sort of, or another friend was on a plane. She's an OB-GYN, and she's not practicing anymore, but she ran into, she was flying home, she ran into her former program director. So I was a program director for residents for 10 years, and they were just chatting on the plane. He talked about his wife, and she said, oh, is she on hormone therapy? He goes, I don't believe in that. Like it's Santa Claus. Like this is that generation of mindset, of somehow you're weak, or I don't believe in it, and you're just giving a woman permission to be whiny. Do you recommend the bioidentical? I do, I do, but you have to be careful. Bioidentical originally, that term was really a marketing term, not a medical term. We don't go into medical textbooks and read the word bioidentical, but it is an easy way to explain to a patient the difference between synthetic and something that is chemically identical to what your body made. And it makes sense to people. So I have adopted using it, always with a caveat. Like remember, you're not going to pull up the oncologist of OB-GYN or any medical textbook and read the word bioidentical. But I do tend to stick to those formulations because they have the greatest safety and efficacy. Well, everything's efficacious, actually. Synthetic is efficacious. But when we start really teasing out risk, blood clots, and the biggest risk, or the blood clots, and the potential for tumors, cancers, etc. And nothing is risk-free that the bioidentical formulations seem to have the best safety profile. Is there a blood test that we can do in general, or any type of test that can give us the best sense of if our hormones are in balance? We need to pause for a super brief break. And while we do, take a moment to share this episode with every single woman that you know, because this information can truly change your life and hers. Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious, and so is self-belief. 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Is there a blood test that we can do in general or any type of test that can give us the best sense of if our hormones are in balance not in Perry, menopause, not a single one-time blood test. We will remember it is a constant level of fluctuation. So what we tend to do in our clinic if a patient is still cycling regularly, we will have her come in on day three of her cycle for blood work and fertility docs do this all the time. We're going to check an Escher Dial to FSH ratio to give us some kind of an idea. We know from the stress staging which is very medical. The FSH level is consistently above 25 on at least three occasions. She probably has about two years left until her periods end. There are some things we can do but they're very nuanced and very complicated. There's new studies been doing on AMH again used in the fertility world but give you an idea of ovarian reserve. It's not great but it is something that can kind of help tease out the information especially if she's had a hysterectomy or she's had a IUD place that has stopped her periods or had an ablation. To help give us a better clue because we can't use her cycles to help us line up what's most likely happening with her. Everyone pause the episode. Rewind. Write that down. Bring it into your doctor. Is there a blood test or other test to tell if we are in menopause? Yes. It's so easy. It's FSH and usually Escher Dial together. FSH is about 50 or pretty much pathonomonic for you or fully menopausal. It's a occasional ovarian activity but for most women you know and that's basically FSH consistently about 50. She's not going to be able to get pregnant again is what that means. And then Escher Dial level that's below 20 is pretty much that's it. You're in menopause. For parimenopause what about the Dutch urine test that's like a 30 day in a row when you pee on the paper for 30 days? To be honest you know that is so far outside of traditional medical training that is very much in the functional world. I've kind of scooted toward functional in my clinical practice but I promise you I don't need a Dutch test to be able to tell if a woman's in parimenopause. Will it help other doctors who are less educated in learning to do this? No. It's too confusing. There's nothing in our medical training if you went the traditional route that says anything about the Dutch test. They fascinate me. I looked at one yesterday. I love preventative stuff. I love it. So remember we have reactive medical knowledge right so we're there to fix what's broken. We don't learn much about prevention in medical school so this whole new functional preventative world is very exciting to me. But it's not being policed and managed by the same groups that are kind of controlling medical education right now. So I think that there's got to be some kind of a bridge. You know there's got to be a consensus. And so Dutch what I don't love about Dutch is it's not recognized by Clia which is like the national standard of laboratory testing. And it's only offered by one lab and it's very very expensive. You know and I feel like I can give good high quality parimenopause care and I can pretty much tell if she's in it without needing to resort to the expense of a Dutch test. Can you share because this is going to be a big offer. I bet you right now. I'm going to I'm just waiting for the DM on Instagram and the emails that are going to come in about this that there's going to be women saying wait. I did go to my doctor and they offered pellets. I didn't know there was something else. Right. Can you share Dr. Merckler Haver? Can you share what exact what options are there exactly? Thank you for hormone replacement therapy. How many what ones I'm going to ask you what ones you use right now. And I want to ask how you apply the certain one. Yeah. Can break it down. Yeah. You mentioned risk and I'm going to go there because how you describe and I want to encourage everyone to grab your book the new metapause your future book the new parimenopause. But you go granular on this. But I want to ask you now also just you know the risks associated with each one. How you apply them. All of it. So who's the candidate who's not we're going to go there. Okay. Yeah. So we break it down into the big three right the estrogens the progesterions and then the androgens. Okay. So let's start with estrogen because most conversations around hormone replacement kind of start with estrogen. So estrogen is available in systemic meaning we're treating the brains the bones the whole body the uterus everything is going into the blood. It's going everywhere. And then we have local. So local is topical. So it's either skin care for here or skin care for down there. And like you put a cream in your vagina. Yep. Yeah. So so as far as formulations we have creams we have gels we have suppositories you know so we have multiple ways to get it there. And thank God because not everybody reacts the same way alcohols can be drying some people have reactions to them. So you know but pretty standard where we start is a vaginal estrogen cream for the genital urinary syndrome of menopause. Now right now it's only after you approved for when you have symptoms. But why would you wait? Why would you wait to be miserable? Like isn't there a place for prevention when almost 100% of us will develop GSM eventually if we live long enough. The loss of estrogen is not benign in the vagina in the bladder. And so it's the best treatment for recurrent utis for vaginal dryness for painful intercourse. Now again it doesn't fix everything. There's a lot of things that can cause problems in the area. So it's important that if you got in your prescription for vaginal estrogen and things aren't getting better quickly that you see something like gel craft or a you know someone who has specializes in the pelvic floor to be able to help you. We have pelvic floor physical therapy. Most women have no idea it even exists and it is literally the best thing that we should be talking about after childbirth. Because we just pushed a bowling ball out of a vagina is or carried one around for nine months. And to expect that it's just going to bounce all back and you're not going to have any problems after that. Women deserve that conversation. So that's kind of systemic. The good news about systemic topical therapy because I put it on my face as well. Is estrogen cream on your face for collagen, appearance, for the health of your skin? Thinning skin, thickening the collagen in your skin. And we actually have several great studies. We had some really good studies before WHI. Then the whole world freaked out and nobody would ever took, you know, and then 20 years later people got brave enough and started doing. So we have a gap in our studies. But we have great studies showing safety and efficacy of topical estrogen for the skin. And just really high level while we go through all these options, vaginal estrogen cream or topical estrogen cream. Doesn't absorb systemically, right? Not clinically. Not at all. It's considered local and even with breast cancer you can use vaginal estrogen. Is it covered by insurance? Yes. Typically with regular normal insurance, vaginal estrogen is covered. And even out of pocket, the generic estradiol cream can run 10 to $15 a month. And what about for your face? So for your face, those are compounded only. So you can take the vaginal estrogen cream. And if patients want to try it, it's alcohol based so it can be, you know, more about this than anyone. It can be a little bit drying. So you can mix it with something, topically, like a pea-sized amount, you know, a couple of times a week. No more than that. Or you can buy a compounded version, which is what I do that has a moisturizing base in it. And so just to use on my face. And what your face is that ever covered by insurance? Or is that more of a... No. Yeah. No, things have to be FDA approved to be covered by insurance. Now, you can get it for the vagina and some women are choosing to put a little on their face. On their face. You know. And Dr. Gendler recommends the back to your hands as well, you know, because we have a lot of thinning skin here as well. Yeah. And so you're saying like a couple, like a pea-sized amount and a couple of times a week on your face. Right. Now be careful. There was one sweet woman who was using the equivalent of a tube a day or something and covering all over her skin. Of course, if you're using that much, she ended up having some, you know, systemic absorption because she was using it well more. So I always make very clear. You know, this is a prescription. You need to talk to your doctor and, you know, make clear it with them and be very clear on how little we need to see efficacy. To get a prescription for it. And let's say someone wants to do it because they know it's going to happen to them 100% of the time. They don't want to ever end up suffering, but you want to get it covered. Yeah. Is that... So it'll be covered for them. Genital urinary... Yeah. So vaginal dryness for recurrent urinary tract infections. And it's actually wonderful for women who have urgency and frequency. So they have to pee a lot. You know, this is a new thing. Or they all of a sudden have to pee in the urges coming really quick. Or they laugh and cough and they pee. Well, that's stress and continents. Okay. Estrogen can be a little bit helpful for that, but that's more of an anatomic problem. So don't want to have that pelvic floor physical therapy. Yeah. So yeah. If you're going in with like, I just feel like I have to pee all the time. I'm getting up in the middle of the night with this urge to pee. Um, cough last sneeze is more stress and continents. And that's a different treatment protocol. Okay. But yeah. And do you personally use vaginal estrogation? I do. I do. I took me about seven years in a my menopause. This is such a funny story. Like, physician treat that so. And I started having delayed orgasms. Like, what's going on? Like, everything's working. I'm on testosterone. My brain's in it. And it was like taking forever and that was new for me. And then I started having to get up to pee again in the middle of the night. Now, I never had any GSM delayed orgasm meaning it just wasn't a long time. I'm forever. And you know, beautiful healthy relationship with my husband. You finally get in the mood. You know, like all the planets line up. Yay. And then you're like, and this was new for me. So I called Karen Men, one of my menopausee girlfriends. I'm like, I'm so frustrated. She goes, well, how much vaginal estrogen are you using? And I go, what? And she goes, Mary Claire. You're not treating? And I said, well, I just wasn't having any symptoms. She said, yes, you are. And so I tell that story, not to embarrass myself, but to be like, I didn't even realize it was still too taboo. And I happened to tell my girlfriend. And she said, clearly, this is, this is your GSM. You're losing blood flow to the area. Let's get you a little vaginal estrogen because I was on systemic, but I wasn't getting enough penetration. Interesting. So a lot of my patients have to use both. And it's happened to me too. And now everything's kind of working back again. Is there something you can use that speeds up orgasm? So there are some topical mostly compounded out there that have things like saldena, like viagra, and then also have other compounds that will increase blood flow to the area. So in a lot of women find that it kind of helps. You know, it's not a problem here. They're having an arousal issue. And so it can help with that as well. But those are compounded and can be a little bit tough to find. So you use that personally daily. And I've heard you share this before. You're talking about the topical estrogen vaginal or on your face. So vaginal for me, it's twice a week. Twice a week. Because it's a stronger dose. And then my topical skin, which is formulated for skin, is daily. Is daily. And I've heard you share that you can also do topical while also doing systemic. Absolutely. At the same time. So yeah. What are the systemic options for estrogen? So systemic means you're putting it into your bloodstream. So there's two classes there. We have oral. And we have non-oral. Okay. Oral is pills for the most part. Non-oral, meaning you swallow it. It goes through the stomach. It gets picked up by the hepatic system. Like anything we ingest orally gets processed in the liver first. That is the natural way of doing things. When we ingest estrogen orally, it goes to the liver. And we can see two things happen that don't happen with a non-oral formulation. Our steroid hormone binding clobulin increases. And our clotting factors can very slightly increase. And for a woman with a predisposition to having blood clots, either through clotting disorder, she's had a history of a blood clot, then you want to avoid the oral estrogen formulation. By switching to a non-oral, like a patch, a cream, a gel, a spray, a trokey, a pellet. I don't want to demonize pellets. It's just a method of delivery. It's just how they're ethically sourced. It's just a problem. So, you know, we have lots of ways to get things into our bloodstream that are FDA commercially available and covered by insurance. So I use a patch. You use the patch. So when you talk about systemic forms of estrogen, if you put it in your mouth and swallow it and it goes through your liver, that is when the increase you're saying, then we have a blood clot. We can. And it's not for everyone. It is very, very low. But we can remove that risk by using a non-oral formulation. Now, that's the patch, the cream. That's cream. Patch cream gel. Pellet gel. Gel. And where we need more research is all the data on cardiovascular protection that came out of the WHO, was with oral estrogen and was with primmerin. And we saw cardiovascular protection. And so some of the people who like really using oral formulations are like, we don't have data on the transdormal saying that it's cardiovascular protective. You know, we need so much more research. But I know that my cholesterol went down, way down. Now, I did change my diet and how I moved my body and stuff when I went through menopause. But my cholesterol was tracking way up, you know, with no, just from being menopausal and by using hormone therapy, changing my diet, increasing my fiber, you know, doing all the things in the toolkit, then I was able to bring that, my LDL is down to 108. And I was doing a victory dance. I just got it, I literally just got it this morning. I had it drawn on Friday before, or whenever we flew out. And I was so happy. So knowing that all the work, you attribute that to the estrogen. So you use the patch. I do. As for my estrogen, for my systemic form. In addition to the local, which is the vaginal cream, and then on your face. Right. Just real quick before we move on to other forms. I just want to ask for everyone listening, because I'm telling you right now, we are not getting the simple from our doctor. We are getting it from you who are our doctor today, which I'm so grateful for. And thank you so much. But for women that say, okay, I, you know, I don't want to swallow a pill. I don't want the ink that even though small, the increased clotting risk or the other things that when it goes through your liver. So I want to do a systemic form that is, you know, coming from the outside, like a patch or a cream or a pellet. And you use the patch. What do all of those typically costs and are they covered by insurance? So anything that's FDA approved. So there's a estrogen gel. There's a couple of gels out there. There's a spray called EVA-MISS. There's the patch, which has multiple generic options. There's a vaginal ring actually that has a big dose that gets absorbed systemically. So the cheapest option is oral estrogen. That's like $2 a month, $2. So for, that's what you swallow. That's what you swallow. So for patients who are low risk for clots and really, really this is a budgetary thing, then the pill sometimes, you know, the pill option is great for them. Then we have the patch, which, you know, with a good RX coupon or a little bit of hustle, we can get for about $20 to $25 a month. For a box of patches. Then the sprays and gels don't have a generic option. And I've seen anywhere from $75 to over $200 a month. And the ring over $200, but the ring lasts for three months. So that's wonderful in that for, you know, if the ring is the best option for you as far as your lifestyle and how you want to do things, because you get systemic and vaginal all in one with the ring being in the vagina. Then, and they could afford it. A lot of women really like the ring option. Do you insert the ring yourself? Yeah. It's a little flexible ring. There's a birth control option of it as far as what it looks like. And they're, you know, I don't know if you're, if you put your finger in them together, it's about that bag around. It's super flexible. So you just have to have the dexterity to fold it like a taco and insert it into the vagina. It's kind of like a tampon. You know when it's in the right place because you don't feel it anymore. And for some patients who struggle, we kind of tell them to get an empty tampon holder and shove the ring in there and then just insert it that way. Insert it. It's a little trick. You know, I'm going to go into how we find coupons, all the things, because that's a big thing when it comes to you. Some of these drugs, but I want to ask you, who, listening right now, is a candidate for HRT and who's not? Yeah. So most of the candidacy is around estrogen. We don't talk about candidacy for testosterone or progesterone, but it's estrogen. And so progesterone can be a little tricky because of breast cancer. But who is not a candidate is easier to talk about. If you have a tumor right now that is being fed by estrogen or progesterone, you are not a candidate. Okay. If you have severe liver disease, I'm not talking malfatti liver. I mean, severe liver disease where you have constantly elevated liver function tests. This is where estrogen is processed in our bodies. Okay. And this is going to be tricky to keep you therapeutic because your body is not able to break it down. Okay. So we have to, that's a very nuanced conversation with liver disease. If you are being treated for a blood clot right now, most people would steer away from estrogen. Once your blood clot treatment is over and we get all your levels back and we've done all the evaluation, you need to avoid oral estrogen at all costs. Okay. But you will be a candidate for transdermal estrogen. If you've had a recent stroke and we're not sure why. So there's two kinds of stroke. One is hemorrhagic meaning you popped a blood vessel and then another is a blood clot in the brain. Okay. If you've had a blood clot in the brain, that's going to be another very nuanced tricky conversation around if you're going to be a candidate for hormone therapy moving forward. And if you simply don't want it, you know, some people are very concerned about putting anything in their body that their body didn't make naturally. That's okay too. Maybe Claire, you can be healthy without hormone therapy, but it is harder. And it's going to take a lot of hustle and you may end up on multiple other medications to control certain conditions that are impacting your life. That's a really, a really fascinating point is that there's a lot of people that maybe are scared and they've heard things over the years. And now they're on all these other medications. The people who are demonizing hormone therapy by and large on social media are women who haven't gone through it yet. Men and people who aren't allowed to prescribe it in the health space. So they're trying to sell you their supplement or their program or their because you don't need this. There's somehow your week or your body's not detoxing or processing, you know, and I'm like, wait a minute. Simply, it's a she satire thyroid removed. No one would tell a woman, you know, and let me tell you, if men's testicles shriveled up and died at 51, we would not even be having this conversation. Like, you know, there would be no question we would replace this testosterone and probably a little bit of a zestrogen because it's protective, you know. And then we're talking about the testosterone testosterone and we're talking so much about the last two. If you have a uterus, progesterone is mandatory if you get estrogen to protect the lining of the uterus. You don't want to just feed the uterine cavity estrogen by itself. That lining will grow and could become cancerous. So we give you a progesterogen. You're fine. If you don't have a uterus or if you have the progesterone in your uterus with an IUD or you, if you have an ablation, you still need it. Let's say you don't have a uterus. Progesterone is an option. It is fantastic for sleep. Fantastic. Few things work better. Estrogen will stop the hot flashes so that you can sleep, you know, without hot flash waking you up. But when I tell you, I have to protect my sleep with my life now as a menopausal person more than I ever did in my 20s. I just put my head on the pillow at the end, right? If I don't, it's like I have a sage and a shaman, you know, in the bedroom. I'm like, I have my progesterone, my magnesium, my L-theanine. You have all this potions and magic because, and I can't have alcohol if I expect to sleep well, at least six hours before I go to bed. It is like life changing the progesterone for my patients to help with their sleep. So even if they've had a hysterectomy and they don't absolutely need it for protection, I am talking to them about their sleep and recommending it for that. So if you're on estrogen right now and you're not on progesterone, that's a big red flag. That's a big red flag. That is someone who doesn't understand an eucronology and what happens to the uterus. So I could save someone's life right now. And that the topical progesterone, if you're doing bioidentical, oral is the only way. The molecule is humongous and has a horrible time going through the skin. And so we really struggle to get intimetral protection. So most of us who know what we're doing, we're using oral micronized progesterone and that is $10 a month. Now, if you have an allergic, if you're allergic to peanut oil, you know, we have options. Thank God we have compounded options for a non peanut oil containing some people, the formulation, they feel groggy or kind of hungover when they get up in the morning. So, you know, it's wonderful that we have different options. This is huge because I just want to call that out again in case someone is, you know, running an errand, doing something else right now and they're listening to this, you're saying if you are on estrogen right now, but you're not also on progesterone, huge red flag. Big red flag. Stop immediately and call your doctor. If you have a uterus. Yeah, okay. You need progesterone. Now, if you have a progesterone containing IUD, you're covered. But if you don't, this is a red flag. And then testosterone, testosterone. So we know beyond the shadow of a doubt that it can be extraordinarily helpful for hypereactive sexual desire disorder or what in layman's terms you would call low libido. We know it works. We also have two FDA approved medications that work pretty well too. So I always discuss all three with my patients. Where are the controversy around testosterone lies? Most people in the menopause world agree if she's suffering from HSDD. Let's give her a trial of testosterone see how she does. Where we're seeing the backlash is that we know mood is a, you know, testosterone libido is a mood. It's in the brain. We know anecdotally and some from older studies that testosterone looks like it's helpful for maybe depression. I'm recommending it off label for my patients with low muscle mass in my clinic. I have a body scanner. So I'm able to check their muscle mass and visceral fat and all that I can measure those things for them. If they're working out, we know that women with higher testosterone levels have higher muscle mass. And so if I supplement her a little bit, then I can help with her muscle mass and decrease her risk of osteoporosis and frailty as she gets older. And so, but any conversation of testosterone right now around outside of libido, some people in the medical world go a little bit crazy. But I'm telling you my patients who I'm using it for desire are telling me it's helping with mental clarity, stamina, mood. They're really, really loving it. And how do we put it in your body? You want to avoid an oral formulation again because of what it does to the liver. So we have most of my patients are using androgel, which is an FDA approved for men version, but we're using it off label. Through the skin on the shoulder here daily to give them a nice steady state. I'm just trying to get them back to their 30 year old levels. Right. Because female testosterone just gently declines throughout life. It is not fall off a cliff in menopause. Okay. It kind of gently declines. And then what we're trying to do is get them back up the hill a little bit to where they felt better in and in their their bodies seem to be healthier at that level. For testosterone for a woman, is that ever covered by insurance? No, never. It's not FDA approved for women for anything, even though we have great data for for. It is an Australia to prove by their version of the FDA. They have commercially available preparations, but it has been removed from approval for women. And it's also a controlled substance like an narcotic. So there's a lot of hoops we have to jump through to get it for our patients because it's been abused not by women typically, but because of that it's controlled and it's really hard to get for a lot of women. How much is it out of pocket? So once you get it with the good or ex coupon or through something like HRT club, you know, we have work around for everything. I can get a six month supply for about $60. So about $10 a month. When you say we're going to dive into I'm so excited about this. How do we find coupons? How do we build our menopause toolkit? Yeah, everyone listening right now, you're going to build your own menopause toolkit right with us. I just want to clarify one question on compounded versus non compounded. So there's going to be a lot of people listening right now that are like that maybe even missed that we just said that word, but there's compounded non compounded forms of medication. And then there's pharmacies that do compounding. Can you explain what both of those things are yeah, and do either of them freak you out ever and because you know as a as a as a I like to have an option. I think like wait, is there human error involved? Is someone is compounding tends to be more human error? So share with us with us with us. We have large skills. So a pharmacy is just a room that makes medication, right? Regardless of how they do it. So we have FDA approved and they tend to be these really large pharmacies that are cranking out the patches and the pills that most pharmaceuticals we use in the US. Most people use non compounded options. Campounding was originally how we got medicine. There was a guy in a lab coat with a bucket somewhere who was mixing up some potion, all right, for you to take. And that kind of evolved. So not everything works for everybody in the FDA approved world. So if you guys still stayed back compounding special things or things that people needed because they they didn't fit the mold. Okay. Campounding is down on a case by case basis typically, but it became there's a there's a loophole there. And so now these giant compounding pharmacies have been made there making things like pellets and they don't they're not subject to FDA oversight. So there's no one going in on a regular basis from the government that are testing to make sure what they say is in the boxes in the box. And it gets even tougher when you have the smaller local guy love these guys who are mixing up things. No one's going to check him and we just have to trust that what he's doing is doing and some of these places are excellent. You know. But it's really hard to tell is this a good, you know, compounding pharmacy or not. So in the hormone therapy world. There wasn't a lot of commercially available stuff after the WHOI available that people felt comfortable using. So in the functional world, they started leaning heavily on the compounding pharmacists to make things for them. And then those pharmacies were getting bigger and bigger and bigger. So about five years ago, the FDA went into the top 12 compounding pharmacies and pulled their hormone therapy options. And what they found so we know that when the FDA goes into check the FDA approved ones, 98% of what they say is in there. We had about a 30% discrepancy of yeah, formulation and amount in the top 12 compounding pharmacy. I don't know their names. So it kind of gives you an idea. I'm sorry. What year was that? I think it was about five years ago. So so basically when the FDA went into FDA approved labs that they said let's do a side by side comparison. Yeah, they know this is 98% their 98% accurate what they said in that medications and that medication. Yeah, when they went into the compounding, which is when it just ordered it like say we're Jane Doe and ordered it and had it shipped to wherever they were. And then they went to the lab and tested it and I saw up to a 30% discrepancy. So the compounding is when someone's actually compounding the medication or making it for you putting it together, they tested it. And it's more human error and we're not getting consistency with each compounding dose. So about 30% wasn't what they said it was. So that's the risk right there. Yeah, yeah. So that's really the big risk. Do I use compounding? Yes. I'm so grateful to have options for my patients who need something out of the box. Okay, and I have a couple of compounders in Houston area who I've actually driven up. Check their love, you know, loved everything that they're doing. Trust them. One of my nurse practitioners is married to a PhD pharmacist. Their daughter is a PhD pharmacist. They lean in heavily on what they think are the most reliable compound. So for my little small clinic, you know, in Texas, it's great to have these options. But on a large scale, shipping out all over the US, I worry. And I think we don't need to do that for everyone that I can get them safe, high quality, efficacious, FDA approved bioidentical hormone therapy. That's very, very affordable. You know, we're going to talk about GLP ones in a minute, which is such a big thing right now when it comes to where we're going to talk about belly fat. And what do we do about it? Yes. They're thinking about GLP ones. Are they safe? Are they not safe? And there's such a huge area of GLP ones from compounded pharmacies right now. So I'm going to ask you about that in a minute. But this is really, really good to know. Cause I think a lot of people, you know, when we're in our doctor's office, and if we get two minutes of their time, and they just say they were compounded really fast, it's hard even process what that is for a lot of us. Because we're just worried am I going to get my question out? Am I going to, am I going to leave the doctor's office with more questions than answers still. And this is happening over and over for so many people. So I think, you know, you breaking down, I'm going to call it a master class today of what, why are our hormones changing? What are they? What are all the symptoms that maybe we thought was something else? And then, you know, this idea of hormone replacement therapy. I want to ask you, because, you know, you talk about the women's health initiative, women's initiative of health. For a long time, you know, there is this moment where a study came out linking cancer to hormone replacement therapy. And then just, I feel like decades went by where everyone was just two decades. So from your, you know, as someone who is called the top menopause doctor in the world now by millions of people, does it tell me about the risk in a nutshell? Does it scare you at all? And what should women be thinking about right now when it comes to HRT? So we know that there are certain windows of opportunity where the benefits are going to outweigh the risk. So if we look at, you know, it's always going to stop the hot flash no matter your age, if you have hot flashes, it will probably get rid of it if it's due to menopause. That all hot flashes are menopause, by the way, most are though. It will always protect your bones. It is after you prove for the protection, you know, for you to protect your bones against osteoporosis, we can cut osteoporotic fracture probably by 50% with the use of hormone therapy. Cardiovascular benefit, we have a window of opportunity and thank God for Howard Hodes and Wendy Mack and Roger Lobo and all these incredible clinicians who have been studying this. The WHOI data, they went back and looked and said, let's break it down by age because the average age in the WHOI was 63 years old. We don't start women on hormone therapy generally at 63. We start them when they're most symptomatic, late period menopause or early menopause, right? So it wasn't a representative sample of the typical patient. Okay. They started women who probably had really pre-existing breast cancer or were, you know, getting very close, put them on hormone therapy. And the estrogen only arm, they saw a 30% decrease at all ages for breast cancer. It was the estrogen and progestagen. It was a very specific progestagen called Provera or Majoroxy progesterone acetate that saw the slight but not statistically significant increase risk. It never reached statistical significance, yet they shouted it from the rooftops of this incredible, you know, they vastly overexaggerated the risks and barely talked about the benefits of all cosmetic mortality decrease. If starting in the first 10 years of menopause, 50% per year decrease in cardiovascular disease. That's how protective estrogen is of our endothelium of the vessels around the heart. Okay. We can decrease your risk of having a heart attack, not 100% and not forever, but we can delay it. So that's the kind of data we're talking about. So when a patient comes in and she's early, she's young, you know, young 50s, you know, and she's like, what's the benefit to me? I'll just lay out with the study state. Now, the US preventative task force has not gotten around to saying these things, but we can decrease your risk of all cosmetic mortality, of a heart attack, of, you know, if you have no pre-existing heart disease, it's probably going to delay the formation of clots and placks and calcified placks in your endothelium. And we know this clearly, but we have a window. Once those things start, it's not, it's better prevention than cure. But it will always protect your bones. It will always protect your vagina and your bladder, you know, and keep you from getting uruse, sepsis and continents and all these things that are plaguing women. Because here's the biggest thing I want everyone to realize. We have a huge gender health cap in this company. When I hear the wellness bros who I adore, I'm going to one today, who talk about living forever and living longer and living to 120, I'm like, yay, women live longer than men doing nothing, just existing. We live 45 years longer than men. We don't live healthier than men. We spend 25% of that life and poorer health in our male counterparts. And we spend much longer time with loss of independence, usually due to dementia and frailty and osteoporotic fracture. This is avoidable. This is what we do in our clinic when we talk about the toolkit. This is why we talk about hormone therapy is what is its place in the prevention of these diseases so that you can age better and longer and stay healthier longer. And, you know, right now, my mother is terrible Alzheimer's and just fell in brokerhip. How can I, and like all the, you know, it's a privilege to be able to do it, but the communication and the drama and the stress and what these diseases are doing to American families. And what the prevention of these are the delay or shortening that time of mom losing her independence and all the things that have to go into place to take care of her. You know, if my mother truly knew what was happening, I think she'd drunk off a roof. And so my husband and I's conversation are around, what are we going to do to not do this to the girls? You know, how do we live healthier longer so that we're not as much of a burden for so long and not that I feel like my mother's a burden, but she wouldn't want this if she knew it was coming. And no one talked to her in her life about preventing what has happened to her. What could she have done to prevent her dementia and to prevent her osteoporosis and leaving menopause out of that conversation is a mistake. You say that the study from a few decades ago was statistically insignificant. And a few decades ago, there was still just a few news channels that everyone had to watch. And so when something like that got broadcast, it just became so it was dominant. It was viral back in how you define viral back then. It was the number one medical news story of 2002. Every newspaper, ABC, CBS, NBC, cover of, you know, cover of Time Magazine. So right now you have, you utilize hormone therapy in your life. I do. And you clearly say for you. And you've been very definitive about who's a candidate who's not. But that the rewards can far outweigh the risk. I'm, I'm living my best life. I get up every morning, excited. I feel better than I did in my 30s and 40s. I have better relationships. I have better boundaries. I'm a better business woman. I'm a better doctor. I'm a better mother. I'm a better wife. I'm having better sex. I'm, you know, I want everyone to have this. And I'm really looking forward to the next 30 years. I'm not scared. Can we be on hormone therapy forever? Eventually, as long as for you, the benefits outweigh the risks. There's no reason to stop as long as you want to keep going. Remember this episode is not just for you and me. Please share this with every single woman that you know because it can change her life too. Coming up, this conversation is so incredible. And y'all can't seem to get enough of Dr. Mary Claire Haver and this menopause master class. So we're continuing this conversation and diving even deeper. I'm so excited that you are not going to want to miss part three of our conversation with Dr. Mary Claire Haver where we're giving you your menopause toolkit, including the tests you need to ask your doctor for, had a prep for your next appointment. What resources are available for free and so much more that's coming up in the next episode of the Jamie Kernleem Show. And if you loved today's episode, please click the follow or subscribe button for the show on your app and give it a five star rating or review. And again, please share this episode with everyone you believe in. Share it with another person in your life who could benefit from it. Post it and share it with others online or in your community who just might need the words and tools and lessons in this episode today. You never know his life you're meant to change today by sharing this episode. And thank you so much for joining me today. Before you go, I want to share some words with you. Could it be more true? You right now exactly as you are are enough and fully worthy. You're worthy of your greatest hopes, your wildest dreams and all the unconditional love in the world. And it is an honor to welcome you to each and every episode of the Jamie Kernleem Show. Here I hope you'll come as you are and heal where you need blossom what you choose journey toward your calling and stay as long as you like because you belong here. You are worthy, you are loved, you are love and I love you and I can't wait to join you on the next episode of the Jamie Kernleem Show. In life, you don't sort the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self worth. When you build your self worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy. 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