MILLIONS of American women in the 1990s were told they could help their bodies ward off major illness by taking menopausal hormone drugs. Some medical associations said so. Many gynecologists and physicians said so. Respected medical journals said so, too.
Along the way, television commercials positioned hormone drugs as treatments for more than hot flashes and night sweats — just two of the better-known symptoms of menopause.
One commercial about estrogen loss by the drug maker Wyeth featured a character named Dr. Heartman in a white coat discussing research into connections between menopause and heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease and blindness.
“When considering menopause, consider the entire body of evidence,” Dr. Heartman said. “Speak to your doctor about what you can do to help protect your health during and after menopause.”
Connie Barton, then a medical office assistant in Peoria, Ill., was one woman who responded to such messages. She says she took Prempro, from 1997, when she was 53, until 2002, when she received a diagnosis of breast cancer. As part of her cancer treatment, she had a mastectomy to remove her left breast.
Ms. Barton is
Is Horse Estrogen For Women A Good Idea?
by ilene - December 15th, 2009 2:46 pm
All treatments have risks and side effects, and here we have a treatment for a normal biological change in women, a natural part of aging. So my one question, in response to the ending of this article, is what is the evidence that bio-identical hormone replacement has a profile of greater good than harm? I’d like to see those studies. Haven’t yet. – Ilene
Is Horse Estrogen For Women A Good Idea?
Courtesy of Mish
Even though female readership on this blog is only eight percent, on behalf of that eight percent, inquiring minds find themselves pondering a rather unusual question: Is Horse Estrogen For Women A Good Idea?
What brings this question to light of day is the marketing efforts of Wyeth (now owned by Pfizer via a merger this year), to promote hormonal treatments Prempro, a combination of aptly named Premarin, an estrogen drug produced from the urine of pregnant mares, and an additional hormone, progestin.
As one might suspect simply from the sound of it, various complications, problems, and lawsuits have arisen.
With that introduction, please consider the New York Times article Menopause, as Brought to You by Big Pharma.