I found this article entitled: "I’m going to stay young": Belief in anti-aging efficacy of menopausal hormone therapy drives prolonged use despite medical risks it is here:
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0233703It is interesting as it suggests that women stay on HRT for prolonged periods to stay "young" I'm not sure i agree with the way that article frames things because equally the women could say I want to stay on HRT to stay healthy and strong! However the paper seems to suggest that staying on HRT long term is perhaps unwise and that the current narrative around HRT is driven too much by pharmaceutical influence, the paper is published in 2020 so not that old. I was under the impression that it was becoming better understood that HRT started early and stayed on was considered safe long term and that risks were associated with older forms of synthetic HRT and potentially with starting HRT 15 + after menopause when many of the estrogen receptors had already stopped working giving supplemental estrogen no place to go.
I am very new into HRT about 6 months now and its a journey but I do feel much better in many ways, I'm 44 so feel like I'd probably perfer to keep using HRT at least until the end of my working life which is probably another 20 years at least! I was under the impression by certain women's health advocates that this was probably very possible for me as long as I had no major issues. This article does make me wonder though, anyone else care to offer any thoughts on this?
This is a quote from the paper:
"Participants perceived estrogen to have anti-aging efficacy, and using HT imparted a sense of control over various aspects of aging. Maintaining this sense of control was prioritized over potential risk from prolonged use. Our findings provide an additional perspective on previous work suggesting the pharmaceutical industry has leveraged older women’s self-esteem, vanity, and fear of aging to sell hormones through marketing practices designed to shape the beliefs of both clinicians and patients. Efforts are needed to: 1) address misconceptions among patients and providers about medically supported uses and risks of prolonged HT, and 2) examine commercial influences, such as medical ghostwriting, that may lead to distorted views of HT efficacy and risk."