I was quite surprised to see one of the BBC online headline news items this morning. It looks like her clinic is being investigated for prescribing high doses of HRT. And she has lost her accreditation with the British Menopause Society.
Although on reflection maybe I am not so surprised. People were starting to speak out on Instagram etc.
What does everyone think about this?
Pretty bad timing for her as she is in the middle of a UK tour.
Even as a lay person and patient, I don't have the expertise I would need to form an opinion about this or any other practitioner. I have strong opinions about my own experience, but they are just my opinions. In other words, I don't know anything about HRT, but I know what I like.
However, the word "Panorama" immediately elicits side-eye from me. I'm still offended by the unscientific and pejorative episode they spewed out about ADHD in the 90s - one of the most extensively studied disorders, with truckloads of published research. I won't go off on that topic, but I have never taken Panorama seriously since then.
I take note of what some here have said about individual practitioners' ideological commitment to one specific approach. I'm still feeling rubbed up the wrong way by my specialist's report, because the more I read it the more skewed it seems towards representing my lifestyle as more unhealthy than it is.
(E.g. "has recently started doing some $specific_exercise", as if I'd said I made a resolution to do one sit-up every other Thursday and I've managed three Thursdays in a row!!1!! Whereas in fact, I made a very specific point about suddenly reaching a performance milestone at $specific_exercise after EIGHT. YEARS.)
But because she specializes in mental health and mindfulness, it has to be that my mental health and mindfulness aren't as good as they could be. Or perhaps I'm not being fair. Anyway... I should have read her profile more carefully, it's really on me that I got mindfulness flung at me when I'm not really in the market for that. At the same time, a market is what it is.
I'm a lay patient who is looking for a private meno clinic and am disappointed to hear negative experiences from some women even with private doctors.
The way I am feeling, I can't be arsed exercising, it's beyond laziness, behind with chores, and it seems to be getting worse, I am post meno 58yrs on 25mcg E and 200mg daily P, approved by NHS gynae after investigative surgery for bleeding.
I was ok on 25, as I had gone through peri, so no flushes came back but like Dr Louise Newson says on her video, I can't pinpoint when things seemed to get worse, I would pin it at early 2022 with daily loose stools, more night sweats, more flushing, but nowhere near as bad as peri, and I kinda went into denial when I started reading about testosterone requests for women on here, dreading the hoops I would have to jump through.
I tried increasing my E, no difference, it's only recently I became interested in testosterone and found out so was lots of other women in the uk, the Davina thing etc.
I ended up relapsing on drugs in 2022, due to low moods, but luckily I have stayed sober since January of this year and ever since, I see a resurgence in meno symptoms.
Newson seemed to talk me individually on one video, but now I am confused as some online experiences of visits to her clinics suggest dissatisfaction, nothing to do with the program, more their protocol.
I think the program was bu11shit.
I want to pay hundreds of pounds to be given more E and not refused T, or a test for it.