Hormone Health Hub: Expert Insights on Testing, Balance & Better Living — menopause
The 5 W's of Menopause
Publicado por Ben White en
Menopause affects approximately 40–50 million women in the US alone — yet it remains widely misunderstood. This article answers the five essential questions: who is affected, what menopause actually is, when it typically begins, where in the body it originates, and why hormone balance is the key to navigating this natural transition with health and vitality.
Navigating the Challenges of Hormone Replacement Therapy Dosing
Publicado por Ben White en
Over 25 million women enter menopause each year and face decisions about hormone replacement therapy. But HRT dosing is far from standardised — and the testing method used makes all the difference. This article explores why doses vary so widely and how saliva, blood spot and urine testing can help optimise outcomes.
Banishing the 7 Dwarves of Menopause
Publicado por Ben White en
Itchy, Bitchy, Sweaty, Sleepy, Bloated, Forgetful and All Dried Up — the seven dwarves of menopause are all too real for millions of women. But these symptoms aren’t inevitable. Undetected hormone imbalances are behind most of them, and testing is the first step to getting your good menopause back.
Natural Progesterone Can Help Treat Breast Cancer- New Research Shows (Part 2)
Publicado por Ben White en
The latest research confirms what Dr. John Lee and Dr. David Zava argued decades ago: maintaining healthy progesterone levels in proper balance with oestrogen is one of the most powerful tools women have for preventing and recovering from breast cancer. This article outlines seven practical steps to restore hormone balance and reduce breast cancer risk.
Natural Progesterone Can Help Treat Breast Cancer- New Research Shows (Part 1)
Publicado por Ben White en
A landmark study published in Nature confirmed what Dr. John Lee and Dr. David Zava argued over a decade ago: natural progesterone — unlike synthetic progestins — can slow or even shrink ER+/PR+ breast cancer tumours. This article explains the receptor science behind the findings and what it means for women’s hormone health.