Dr. Louise Newson
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah.
No.
Hmm.
So what are the symptoms or what are the things that you've learned about perimenopause that have surprised you the most with what you're doing and the feedback that you're getting?
But just the feedback on social media.
Yeah, it's a great balance because I don't feel that you're making fun of women, but you are enabling them to think and understand.
And like you say, feel validated.
And I've written a chapter in my new book about women who aren't being listened to.
And that's the biggest problem, actually, I think, in healthcare, in that patients, but especially women, are not believed and not listened to and not understood.
And as a doctor, you almost have a tick box of symptoms.
And if you get enough ticks, then they've got this diagnosis.
If they've got some other symptoms, you've got that diagnosis.
And for so many of us, we haven't had really good training in hormones and perimenopause.
And so, you know, if I was a neurologist and someone came to me with tinnitus ringing in the ears and maybe some, like you say, some smell changes, I'd be trying to work out the pathways in the brain, do a scan and work out if there was, you know, a tumour or something going on that was causing it.
And if the scan was normal...
I would say to a patient, well, you're normal.
And they would go, well, no, I'm still having these symptoms.
If I was a cardiologist and someone had palpitations, I would just focus on the heart.
And you can see it, you know, medicine is very siloed.
So actually to have someone that can explain the reason for those symptoms.