About menopause
Menopause is the natural cessation of menstruation, typically occurring between ages 45 and 55 in Ireland (average age around 51). The transition phase before — perimenopause — can begin years earlier and is often the time when symptoms are most disruptive. Symptoms vary widely between women: some experience minimal disruption, others find symptoms significantly affect quality of life. Effective treatments exist for those who need them.
Symptoms and signs
- Vasomotor symptoms — hot flushes and night sweats (most characteristic)
- Mood changes — irritability, low mood, anxiety, brain fog
- Sleep disturbance — often driven by night sweats
- Vaginal symptoms — dryness, soreness, discomfort during sex (genitourinary syndrome of menopause)
- Reduced libido
- Joint and muscle aches
- Irregular periods (perimenopause) before they stop
- Bladder symptoms — urgency, urinary tract infections
- Long-term: bone density loss (osteoporosis risk), cardiovascular risk changes
When to seek help — red flags
An Online Doctor consultation is appropriate for: troublesome menopausal symptoms, discussing HRT options, prescription renewals, and follow-up. Seek in-person review for: bleeding more than 12 months after periods stopped (postmenopausal bleeding always needs assessment to exclude endometrial cancer); heavy, prolonged, or unpredictable bleeding before menopause; new pelvic pain; breast lump; suspected early menopause (under 45) for full hormonal assessment.
Treatment options
Per NICE CKS and ICGP guidance:
- Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) — most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms. Oestrogen (transdermal patches/gel preferred, or oral) combined with progestogen if you have a uterus. Often gives substantial improvement in hot flushes, sleep, mood, and vaginal symptoms
- Vaginal oestrogen — low-dose cream, tablet, or ring for local symptoms (dryness, urinary frequency). Very safe; not the same as systemic HRT
- Non-hormonal options for vasomotor symptoms — SSRIs (paroxetine, venlafaxine), gabapentin, clonidine. Less effective than HRT but useful when HRT is contraindicated
- Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) — effective for hot flushes, sleep, and mood
- Lifestyle — regular exercise (bone health, mood, sleep), calcium and vitamin D, weight management, avoid known hot-flush triggers (alcohol, spicy food, hot environments)
Self-care and long-term health
Menopause is a good time to focus on long-term health: regular weight-bearing exercise (protects bone density), calcium and vitamin D intake, smoking cessation, moderating alcohol, BP and cholesterol checks. Cervical screening continues to age 65 in Ireland (CervicalCheck). Mammography under BreastCheck from age 50. Dress in layers to manage hot flushes. Keep the bedroom cool. Pelvic floor exercises help bladder symptoms.
Frequently asked questions
Is HRT safe?
For most women under 60 who start HRT within 10 years of menopause, per NICE menopause guidance, the benefits outweigh the small risks. Risks (small absolute increase in breast cancer, very small increase in venous thrombosis with oral oestrogen — transdermal carries no such increase) are individualised. The Online Doctor will review your personal and family history.
When should I start HRT?
HRT is most beneficial when started near the menopausal transition (within ~10 years of last period). Starting later in life carries different risk-benefit considerations.
How long can I stay on HRT?
There's no arbitrary stopping age. Many women stay on HRT for years if symptoms persist. Annual review of symptoms, benefits, and risk profile is appropriate. The lowest effective dose for the duration symptoms need it is the principle.
I'm in my 40s and my periods are irregular — is this menopause?
Possibly perimenopause. Symptoms can begin years before periods stop. An Online Doctor consultation can help interpret your symptoms. Hormonal blood tests (FSH, oestradiol) are often unhelpful in this phase — diagnosis is usually clinical.
Sources: HSE.ie, NICE CKS Menopause, British Menopause Society, ICGP. General information only.