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Behati Prinsloo and Adam Levine are having a baby girl!

According to reports, Behati Prinsloo and Adam Levine are expecting a sweet as sugar little baby daughter!
Behati Prinsloo and Adam Levine

Us Weekly revealed the exciting news, reporting that multiple sources close to the pair confirmed the word to the publication.

The 26-year-old model, who is due on the 20th September, was spotted registered at West Hollywood’s Bel Bambini.

The Victoria’s Secret starlet was joined by co-angel and mum-of-one, Lily Aldridge.

One eye witness at the shop heard Adam’s wife tell the brunette beauty, “This is a whole new world,” as they bypassed the boys section of the store.

Proud hubby Adam shared this bump shot of his wife!

The news of the angel baby was confirmed back in March, with sources confirming that the model is already three to four months along.

Insiders also revealed that, unsurprisingly, her rocker hubby Adam is “over the moon” about the wonderful news.

A month later, in early April, the proud daddy-to-be confirmed the upcoming arrival on Instagram, with a photo of a bikini-clad Behati in a Lakers hat, which he captioned, “My two favorite laker fans.”

Click here to check out which of your favourite stars are expecting… Post continues below

The model shows off her growing bump.

Meanwhile, the 26-year-old recently handed over her glittery bra and wings to slip into something a little more comfortable.

“Yup took the plunge. First pair of maternity jeans and it feels so good,” the expectant mum penned to her 3.6 million Instagram followers.

The couple began their whirlwind romance in June 2012.

Two years later, they tied the knot in a lavish ceremony in Los Cabos, Mexico, and it wasn’t long after the baby talk began.

Just one month into happily married life, Adam revealed to Ryan Seacrest that he and his new wife were eager to start a little family, or rather a huge one.

The look of love! These two cool cats can’t wait to be parents!

“We’re definitely going to do it,” the Sugar singer said during a KIIS FM radio interview before joking, “I want to have 100 kids. I want to have more kids than would be socially responsible.”

And the South-African beauty agreed with her handsome hubby, revealing that just like him, she too longs for a big brood.

“I’ve always wanted a family since I was a little girl, a big family… I’m an only child so I wanted like 10 kids… for sure,” she said during an interview with Diana Madison earlier this year.

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Block stars announce bun in the oven

Kyal and Kara Demmrich have revealed they are expecting their first child together.

The couple – known as the ‘Super-Ks’ on their time on season eight of The Block – shared their exciting news on social media.

They shared an image of themselves lying on the sand with a baby drawn in between them with the caption: “Bun is in the Oven! Very excited to meet our little one in October.”

Kyal and Kara have been married for six years. Since their time on The Block they have built their own renovating business and work together fixing up homes across the country.

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Popular baby sleeping bags urgently recalled

The sleeping bags pose a choking risk to babies and parents must stop using them immediately.

Big W yesterday issued an urgent recall of several of its Dymples sleeping bags over choking fears.

The retailer said press studs on the product could become loose and fall off the bags, becoming a serious choking hazard for infants.

The affected products were sold in stores nationwide from January 25 this year until last week.

Big W apologised to customers and said they could return the sleeping bags for a full refund.

Styles affected include (article numbers can be found on the care label inside the garment):

Grey Bears – Article Numbers: 400511, 400510, 400512, 400513

Blue Vehicles – Article Numbers: 400515, 400514, 400516, 400517

White Bunny – Article Numbers: 400523, 400522, 400524, 400525

Pink Hearts – Article Numbers: 400527, 400526, 400528, 400529

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Princess Sofia and Prince Carl Philip welcome a son!

Sweden's royal family are celebrating the birth of the newest royal baby boy!
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Sweden’s Royal Palace revealed the news in statement.

“Princess Sofia gave birth to a healthy and prosperous child on Tuesday, April 19 at 6:25 p.m. Both mother and child are doing well.”

The palace added that Carl Philip was in the hospital room during the birth of his son, the baby weighed in at 7 lbs., 9 oz. and 19.3 inches long.

Carl Philip married the former glamour model last June.

The pair traveled on Tuesday evening from their new home at Drottningholm Palace to the royal family’s hospital of choice, Danderyd Hospital.

The new dad addressed the media during this time, thanking everyone for their well wishes.

“For me and my wife, this is obviously a great day with a lot of emotion,” he said.

“Words cannot describe,” the proud new papa added.

The Prince did admit it’s too soon to tell who the baby looks like, but did reveal that his son has dark-hair.

Clearly he’s already a hands on dad, the Swede told reporters he cut the umbilical cord himself.

“We are so excited,” he shared about his son, who is fifth in line to the Swedish throne.

Mum’s the word! The couple decided to be surprise with their baby’s gender.

The couple, who wed in June last year, went into the birth not knowing what they were having.

“It’ll be a surprise,” Sofia told a reporter late last year. “It feels great.”

The little Prince’s grandmother, Queen Silvia, was in New York preparing to deliver a speech to the United Nations when the bundle of joy arrived.

“It was a bit difficult. I was sitting here in the meeting, it was very interesting and important,” she told Swedish reporters.

“I’m so happy, really. All is well, and both the Princess Sofia and the baby are doing well. I’m walking walk on clouds!”

Click here for more royal cuties check out the next generation the little Prince will be joining from around the world

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Hospital caught selling babies to childless couples

Vulnerable pregnant women targeted by a hospital that sold their babies for profit.

A hospital has been accused of using pregnant women as slaves after it was discovered that babies were being traded to childless couples for $1839.

Palash Hospital, a private hospital in central India 30-bed clinic in the Gwailor district of India is being labelled a “baby farm” after authorities reportedly closed in on the illegal baby trade with police rescuing two of the infants who were sold for profit.

Prateek Kumar, from the ASP crime branch, told the Times of India: “Three others have been sold to childless couples in Uttar Pradesh and Chattisgarh.”

According to reports the hospital’s manager, Arun Bhadoria was arrested and told police that women with unwanted pregnancies had been targeted by those involved in the infant trafficking.

When hospital administrators could not provide the whereabouts of two babies born there an investigation was launched. SBS reports that so far five people have been charged, including the Palash Hospital’s director, TK Gupta, hospital manager Arun Bhadoria, and a few parents who have purchased babies from them – some of those charges include slavery offences.

An officer involved in the case told the Times of India: “When a girl or her parents approached them for a termination of pregnancies, doctors at this hospital used to convince them assuring a safe and secret delivery.”

“Once the baby is delivered and the mother gets discharged, hospital authorities start hunting for gullible couples who could buy them.”

Following a tip-off about babies being sold the hospital was raided at the weekend and police are now looking for those people who bought or sold the babies.

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UK Film crew stumble on NT castaway just hours away from death

He had said his last prayer.

British TV host Jeremy Wade, presenter of ‘River Monsters’, and his crew were searching the waters of Barranyi North Island in the Northern Territory for some exotic fish when they stumbled upon a castaway fisherman in need of rescue.

Wade and his five-man crew were around the collection of islands 750 kilometers south-east of Darwin when they spotted a half-naked man waving his hands in the air from a cave on the shore of a small uninhabited stretch of land.

According to reports it seems the stranded man, known as Tremine, had become stuck on the island a few days prior after he lost sight of his boat when he came ashore and was just hours from dehydrating to death having been trapped in temperatures upward of 43 degrees without water.

Stephen Shearman, the director of the episode “Death Down Under,” told Inside Edition the man was “preparing to die” after he became land locked on the barren strip, surrounded by crocodile infested waters.

“He had said his last prayer,” Shearman told InsideEdition.com. “He was prepared to die and meet his maker.”

The film crew was on assignment in the region to unscramble the mystery of six men who died in a plane crash near to the Gulf of Carpentaria and weren’t even going to shoot in that area but the waters of their original location proved too choppy.

“Together, we spotted this blue Esky, or cooler box, that was just sat on the rock,” Shearman said of the rescue.

Beforehand the men on board the boat were supposedly making jokes about Tom Hanks, making reference to the 2000 movie, Cast Away.

But suddenly, Shearman said, “this guy with no clothes was running out of the cave, waving his arms out.”

Shearman pointed out that man from Borroloola, a town about 50 km upstream from the Gulf of Carpentaria, was no novice to fishing alone but even the most experienced men can quickly succumb to the elements as the human body can only survive for up to 72 hours without water – Tremine had been out there for 60 hours already.

“Everything was fine, and within two to three hours, everything wasn’t really fine at all,” Shearman said. “In his own words, he was ‘preparing to die.'”

“He had tried to walk back, got beaten by the sun, and made his way back to the beach,” Shearman said.

“Meanwhile, he had suffered from sunstroke and was unable to go any further. He then spent that first night on the beach, and the next morning he tried again, but the sun had gotten to be too much for him, and at this point, he is now trapped.”

But thankfully he was rescued and “apart from a bruised pride, he was back to normal,” making a full recovery very quickly. Apparently not losing his sense of humour in the process.

Sherman gleefully remarked: “He’s given up smoking, but he’s promised God he’s going to start smoking again. If he had a lighter, he’d be able to cook, and he’d have a fire.”

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Warning: A Prosecco shortage is coming

This is not a drill.

A Prosecco shortage could be coming, warn experts who say that suppliers are struggling to keep up with the demand of the middle classes favourite fizzy stuff.

New figures from market research firm IRI suggests that Brits are mostly to blame for the sparklling wine scarcity with prosecco sales reaching £356 million ($656 million AUD) in the period from February 2015 to February 2016 – that’s a 34 per cent increase on the previous year. To put it into perspective sales of champagne increased by just 1 per cent to £251 million ($463 million AUD) in the same year.

At this rate experts caution that the demand for the delicious drop will soon exceed supply meaning “mixologists” are going to have to get creative when making you Aperol Spritz.

One of the biggest reasons that wine suppliers can’t just up production is because prosecco is a protected regional product, meaning that it can only be made in the Veneto region of Italy.

“Like Champagne, Prosecco is geographically limited and can only be produced in a small region of Italy,” Toby Magill, head of beer, wine and spirits at IRI told the UK’s Telegraph.

“Supply is finite. Demand is growing everywhere in the world so there’s a limit on what retailers can get their hands on.”

So this is not a drill. Stock up because we are nearing the bottom of the barrel.

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Why the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge almost never hold hands

They’re a loving young couple, but William and Kate almost never touch in public for this simple reason.
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The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are the picture of marital harmony, but they’ve been snapped holding hands less than a dozen times in a decade.

RELATED: British Royals are expected to portray themselves in a certain way dictated by royal protocol (hello no PDA!) But sometimes they break the rules…

Following the birth of their second child, Princess Charlotte.

Why? Simply because they take their royal “jobs” very seriously and don’t think public displays of affection are very professional.

“There is no actual etiquette or royal protocol that says the couple must refrain from PDA,” royal etiquette expert Myka Meier told People magazine.

“The likely reasoning is more that while the couple are working representatives of British Monarchy, they are likely to show very little PDA, if any, to remain professional during their designated roles.”

Sometimes, though, especially during more relaxed events – like the 2012 London Olympics – the couple do let their guard down and let their love shine through. And we just love it when they do!

This story originally appeared on Australian Women’s Weekly

The couple at the 2012 London Olympics.

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Michelle Bridges’ incredible story

Professional fitness trainer Michelle Bridges has spoken about motherhood, her estranged father and her inspirational upbringing on a telling episode of Australian Story.
Michelle Bridges

She’s the woman who has got Australia on its feet.

Gracing our screens back in 2007 on The Biggest Loser, she’s been key to transforming so many lives.

But today, the camera is on Michelle Bridges, and she is telling her full story.

Monday’s episode of Australian Story took us through the journey of a young girl obsessed with health and fitness, who went on to create a multi-million dollar empire based on a simple motto; “Just freakin’ do it”.

The brunette beauty became a trainer on the Australian version of the US reality show, The Biggest Loser in 2007.

From the moment her relentless drive and can-do attitude hit the small screen, her life was thrown into the public eye, which, of course, opened up channels of both praise and criticism.

“[The Biggest Loser] has all sorts of critics who say, ‘You’re putting these people up to be insulted or laughed at or made the butt of a joke,” she said of the public’s reaction to the show.

“I think it might be seen that I have this agenda on people who are overweight or people who are deemed fat. Honestly if you are happy where you are, genuinely, more power to you,” she went on.

“But I can tell you now, I am yet to have met someone who is morbidly obese and happy.”

Michelle pictured with her partner and fellow trainer, Steve Willis.

In the telling segment, Michelle also dished about the moment she began her love story with fellow TBL trainer, Steve Willis AKA The Commando.

“When I first met him, he was pretty much straight out of the Army, virtually. So he was very intense back then. And I remember thinking, ‘Who is this guy?’” the mother-of-one said with a laugh.

“For a long time, making season after season of The Biggest Loser, we were just friends. It was more of a communication connection that I think drew us together in that sense, rather than anything physical,” said Steve on his now-partner.

“We both came together at a time when we were both pretty raw and in a place of: ‘Wow, what’s happening to our relationships?’ Steve has three beautiful children. They’re in my life and I’m in theirs.”

Michelle split from former-husband, Bill Moore in 2013.

The program didn’t touch on whether or not trainers began their relationship whilst with their previous partners; however it did reveal that Michelle’s ex-husband, Bill Moore, was not ready to pull the plug on their nine-year marriage.

“That was a very difficult time. I felt that I didn’t want to leave the relationship. I didn’t want it to end but Michelle had sort of… for her, she wasn’t in the same space.” he said.

He explained that their romance had begun to “suffer” when her fitness empire took off, both nationally and internationally.

“It was everywhere and inevitably our relationship was suffering from it. And really, in hindsight, we probably both chose the business over the relationship.”

“Maybe that was the baby that we didn’t have.”

See Michelle’s former husband’s emotional confession in the video player below. Post continues…

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The No Excuses Cookbook author also bravely opened up about a time she was sexually assaulted at the age of 18.

“I was just looking for a part time job. I went in for an off-the-cuff interview at a restaurant, and the next thing I knew, the guy was attacking me and basically trying to rape me,” she said.

“In my head I thought, ‘This is just not going to happen. This is not my story’. I absolutely fought back with everything I had.”

“I got out, I ran all the way to the police station. The man ended up going to prison. I realised ‘I can’t carry this thing around, because if I do, it means he still has control’. So I had to at some point, let it go.”

Nowadays, Michelle is embracing her most important role as a loving mother.

Today, Michelle juggles her time between her demanding schedule as an Australian fitness icon and her adorable son Axel.

Speaking of her bub as the “best thing” she’s done with her life, she also opens up about the lost relationship with her estranged father.

“Having a child has just been the best thing I think I’ve ever done – and I’ve done a lot,” she began.

“You start thinking about family and family members and you know, what’s happened in the past. I don’t really have a relationship with my Dad. My Dad would now know that I’ve had a baby and that he’s got a grandson. So I think: ‘Gosh, you know, should I introduce Axel to him?’ And that probably would be a really nice thing to do.”

Steve and Michelle welcomed baby Axel Bridges Willis on December 19, 2015.

She spoke of how her son and his health has inspired her to make a difference when it comes to the nutrition of Australia’s next generation.

“Having Axel has really made me think about how I can use what I’ve learnt about health and fitness to make a better life for kids like him,” the 45-year-old began.

“I’d like to tackle the junk food industry the way that the tobacco industry was tackled 50-odd years ago. We’re now seeing children that potentially have a lifespan shorter than their parents. Never before have we ever seen that globally.”

“I’d like to get out there and start fighting the fight for others who can’t fight the fight.”

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Does HRT cause cancer?

Is HRT really a poison or is it a panacea for menopause?

It would start as a steady rise in temperature, then spread until her body was consumed in a burning flush. Her internal thermostat had gone haywire. She would wake up several times each night, drenched in sweat and unable to return to sleep.

By day, Jane Turner felt lethargic and easily frustrated. A fog had descended over her normally sharp mind. She couldn’t recall names or where she’d left her keys. She feared she had Alzheimer’s.

At work, the then 48-year-old was struggling to cope. As a business manager, she had a reputation for being organised, competent and cool under pressure.

“I’ve always been someone who prides themselves on their cognitive abilities, but I was struggling to finish a sentence,” Jane recalls.

“I was having hot flushes in meetings, my mood was flat at best and I probably could have been diagnosed with depression.”

On top of that, her skin was dry, her joints aching and her thick hair was thinning. “You get this feeling of your body breaking down,” she says.

When Jane’s doctor diagnosed menopause, she was faced with the decision of whether to go onto hormone replacement therapy (HRT).

After discussing the risks and benefits, Jane went home to think about it.


When news broke in 2002 that a major women’s health trial had been suspended because the health risks of HRT were found to have outweighed the benefits, shockwaves resounded among women worldwide.

Until then, doctors had routinely prescribed HRT for menopause. It was widely regarded as beneficial and protective against various age-related diseases, with few downsides.

“When I was a medical student,” recalls gynaecologist Dr Andrew Pesce, of the Australian Medical Association, “we were taught that HRT was good for women and improved their health. Over the years, it became clear that HRT could have some adverse impacts on women’s health, but it was thought these were offset by a reduced risk of heart attacks.”

Many women remained on HRT indefinitely into old age. Some even regarded it as “an elixir of youth” and enthused about the perks to their skin, energy and sex lives.

However, the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study changed all that. It reported that HRT increased women’s risk of breast cancer, stroke, heart disease and blood clots (yet, conversely, lowered the risk of bone fractures and bowel cancer).

Headlines sounded the alarm bells: “HRT Warning for Women” and “CALL YOUR GP”. The Cancer Council of NSW called for restrictions to be imposed on HRT use in Australia.

In the heat of the moment, the WHI statistics became a source of confusion. A 26 per cent increase in the risk of breast cancer was interpreted by some as meaning they had a one in four chance of developing the disease if they took HRT. That would, of course, be a high-stakes game of Russian Roulette.

In fact, the WHI study found that the risk of developing breast cancer in a year rose from 0.3 to 0.38 per cent on HRT (or the difference between 30 and 38 per 10,000 women getting breast cancer).

Nevertheless, a can of worms had been opened that would profoundly alter the way we viewed HRT.


Fourteen years on from the original WHI report, there is still a sense of anxiety around HRT.

Indeed, figures collated from Medicare Australia data by The Weekly reveal the number of annual subsidised HRT prescriptions has halved and remained low since the WHI study.

In 2001-02, there were 2.27 million prescriptions. In our most recent tax year, the figure is 1.02 million.

So are we simply becoming more sensible about HRT or has the pendulum swung too far in the other direction?

Associate Professor John Eden, head of the Sydney Menopause Centre at the Royal Hospital for Women, believes women are suffering unnecessarily because of a fear of HRT.

He tells of severely affected women falling into deep depression, having to leave jobs, divorce and even becoming suicidal.

“These women are in real trouble,” he says. “Their flushes can be continuous – they can wake you from your sleep every 30 minutes. One in eight women will have severe flushes for life. I’m amazed at how many of these women come to see me with a friend because their partner or husband has gone. I never used to prescribe antidepressants – now it happens all the time.”

However, Professor Karen Canfell of Cancer Council NSW, says it’s important women are informed that the risks of HRT are real. “There’s a large body of evidence both internationally and in Australia that has found an increase in the risk of breast cancer in women who use HRT.”

Professor Canfell says increased awareness of the risks and the resulting drop in usage has led to the equivalent of 800 fewer cases of breast cancer per year in Australia.

This figure, however, is hotly disputed. Critics say breast cancer rates had started to decline pre-

WHI for other reasons (such as mammograms), so this drop can’t all be linked to a drop in HRT use.

Nevertheless, a Cancer Council NSW study conducted last year found most Australian women taking HRT remain on it for too long, meaning over the course of years they double their risk compared to those who never use it, says Professor Canfell.

Dr Pesce reckons moderation is key in both the communication and usage of HRT, so women can balance their own personal risks. “I think the pendulum has gone a bit too far,” he says, “because the message hasn’t got out that short-term use doesn’t carry the same concerns as long-term use.

“There are a lot of women who would have a substantial increase in their quality of life if they just took it for a short time.”

The rule of thumb for doctors nowadays, he says, is “you only use HRT if that’s what’s needed to treat hormone deficiency [which manifests in menopausal symptoms] at the lowest dose for the shortest possible time.”


Given the controversy over HRT, it’s worth taking a look at the evidence. The trouble is that HRT is complicated and many factors shape your risk, including your age, lifestyle, medical history, genetics, when you start, the type of HRT you take and how long you stay on it.

For some, HRT can be beneficial and may even lower the risk of disease and death. For others, though, even short-term use may be too risky or have prohibitive side-effects.

First up, let’s be clear: as a treatment for the symptoms of menopause, HRT is unrivalled. Nothing else comes close. That’s not really surprising, given it is replenishing the hormones that a woman’s body is losing at menopause.

Yet, equally, not everyone needs it. About half of women experience only mild or no symptoms at menopause, according to Professor Eden. Another quarter has moderate symptoms, he says, and

the final quarter suffers severely. For them, it’s a question of quality of life.

As Professor Bronwyn Stuckey, an endocrinologist and President of the Australasian Menopause Society, explains, menopause is a “hugely variable” experience. “There’s a big myth among women that you go through menopause and you come out the other end and everything is okay,” Professor Stuckey says.

“But some will have symptoms into their 70s and 80s, whether or not they go onto HRT. Some will have symptoms for a while and when they stop HRT, they don’t have them anymore.”

Actor and comedian Jean Kittson, who wrote a book about menopause, You’re Still Hot To Me, started HRT after a torrent of flushes, sweats, insomnia and low moods left her struggling at work and home.

“I had no trepidation [about HRT] once I had researched it,” she says. “And once I was on it, I got to sleep again, I felt better and I got my mojo back.”

However, Jean’s been perturbed by the judgement of women using HRT.

“If you can do natural things and you don’t need it, that’s great,” she says. “Not everyone needs it. But really the only thing for severe symptoms is HRT.”

Experts say there’s no reliable way to predict how menopause will be for you, although it’s likely to be partly genetic. Women who’ve experienced post-natal depression and mood disorders may be more vulnerable.

It’s worth noting that the original WHI trial was set up to investigate HRT and cardiovascular health, so it didn’t include menopause relief in weighing up the risks and benefits. Other criticisms were the average age of women in the trial was too old at 63 (the average age of menopause is 51) and there were high rates of overweight and ex-smoker participants. This makes the trial’s results more vulnerable to skewing.

Still, last year, a Cochrane review (the gold standard for scientific research) concluded that HRT did not protect post-menopausal women against heart disease – but did increase the risk of stroke by 0.6 per cent and blood clots by 0.8 per cent.

Drill down into the detail and there were more interesting findings.

Women who started HRT in the first 10 years of menopause lowered their risk of dying or suffering a heart attack – and had no increased risk of stroke. They still had a slightly increased risk of blood clots.

Author Dr Henry Boardman, of the UK’s Oxford University, summarised it like this: “We found that if 1000 women under 60 years started hormone therapy, we would expect six fewer deaths, eight fewer cases of heart disease and five extra blood clots over about seven years, compared to 1000 similar women who did not start hormone therapy.”

While this finding needs strengthening through more research, Professor Stuckey says this appears to be the ideal “window of opportunity” for women to take HRT if needed.

Indeed, research suggests that judicial short-term use of HRT early in menopause can limit the additional risk of breast cancer.

“The good news is that the extra risk does disappear quite soon after women stop using menopausal hormone therapy,” confirms the Cancer Council’s Professor Canfell.


To put risk into perspective, doctors note that drinking a couple of glasses of wine every night, having babies after the age of 35 or being overweight are comparable to HRT in raising your odds of breast cancer.

Drinking less and losing weight are tangible ways > to offset your risk (thinner women, however, have a slightly higher risk of breast cancer from HRT because oestrogen is stored in fat cells and their breast tissue tends to be denser).

Some research has found HRT slightly increases the risk of ovarian cancer, while evidence of a lower risk of bowel cancer is inconclusive. And while HRT does reduce the risk of a bone fracture, that’s not usually enough reason to take it on its own.

To complicate matters, the type of HRT and even the way you take it (pills, patches, gels, creams, tablets, implants and intrauterine devices) also affect your risk. Smokers and overweight people, for example, may be better off using patches to mitigate their risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT).

Women who’ve had a hysterectomy can take oestrogen-only HRT, which has a lower risk of breast cancer and may offer slight protection against heart disease.

Those who have an intact uterus, however, need the added progestogen in “combined HRT” to protect themselves from endometrial cancer.

Meanwhile, testosterone therapy is being researched as a potential treatment for the loss of libido for some women and an HRT drug called tibolone (sold under the brand Livial) acts like a combination of all three hormones, with the advantage that it doesn’t appear to increase the risk of breast cancer in healthy women.

Among those who need to be careful about HRT are those with a history or extra risk of breast or endometrial cancer, heart disease or DVT.

Jane Turner, now 53, decided not to go onto HRT because her mother had died of breast cancer.

To reduce stress, she left her job to run a wellness coaching business. She also began exercising and addressed a binge-eating disorder. Drawing on her positive health strategies, she wrote a book about menopause.

“When I got off processed foods,” she says, “my hot flushes stopped and I started to feel better.” Five years on, Jane is feeling good again.


Despite the differing views, there are some core messages most experts agree on. Your quality of life at menopause is important. HRT is effective for moderate to severe symptoms. You don’t have to grin and bear it. Talk it through with your doctor first and have regular check-ups.

If you are suffering, start HRT as early as you can. Aim to use it for less than five years and try coming off it during winter. Don’t stop abruptly, as a sudden fall in oestrogen will probably cause problems. Instead, wean yourself off it slowly.

If you can’t take HRT, there are other treatments. Professor Eden says vaginal dryness, for example, is an “almost universal” symptom by the age of 60 and is easily remedied with creams, yet many women are too embarrassed to seek help.

As Jean Kittson observes, today’s women cannot afford to put their lives on hold for menopause. Many are juggling busy lives, demanding jobs and caring for teenage children and elderly parents.

“You need to be able to think clearly,” she says, “not suffering aches and pains, and scratching your legs. Not having marriage breakdowns because you can’t cope [with the symptoms]. Not having to leave work because you can’t function. Not being unable to sleep, being critical all the time nor, for some women, having painful sex. We have to be fully functional human beings.”

This story originally appeared in the April issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

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