Source :NEWS18 NEWS
Last Updated:May 15, 2025, 10:05 IST
According to Apollo Health of the Nation data, the incidence of type 2 diabetes among postmenopausal women has soared from 14% to 40%, while obesity affects up to 86% of women
Early menstrual irregularities, changes in mood, skin issues, or unexplained weight shifts are not just cosmetic or transient concerns—they are clinical clues
For decades, menstruation has been viewed as a monthly inconvenience or a reproductive checkpoint. Rarely, however, is it recognised for what it truly is: a vital sign. Just like blood pressure or heart rate, the menstrual cycle offers critical insight into a woman’s overall health—insights that are too often overlooked or misunderstood.
In India, conversations around women’s health still pivot primarily around fertility and childbirth. But what about the years that follow? The sharp rise in chronic conditions among women in their 40s and 50s demands urgent attention. According to Apollo Health of the Nation data, the incidence of type 2 diabetes among postmenopausal women has soared from 14% to nearly 40%, while obesity now affects up to 86% of women in this demographic. These are not just numbers; they are early warning signs of a health system that has failed to evolve alongside women’s physiological realities. Dr. Tripti Dubey, Senior Consultant – Obstetrics, Gynaecology & Robotic Surgery at Apollo Hospitals, Navi Mumbai, shares all you need to know:
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The Silent Signals of a Shifting Body
Before menopause sets in, women’s bodies undergo subtle, often unspoken transitions. Irregular periods, heavier or lighter bleeding, increased fatigue, mood fluctuations, and unexplained weight gain—these aren’t just inconveniences, they are signals. More importantly, they may be early indicators of insulin resistance, polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), thyroid disorders, cardiovascular risks, or even cancer.
In fact, a study published in The Lancet Regional Health – Southeast Asia (2024) found that more than 60% of Indian women with irregular periods in their 30s were later diagnosed with metabolic conditions by their 50s. Yet, the link between menstrual health and chronic disease remains largely unaddressed in public health conversations.
Menopause: Not an End, But a Beginning
Menopause is not a single moment; it’s a hormonal marathon. Estrogen, which protects the heart, bones, and brain, declines steadily—leaving women vulnerable to osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and cognitive decline. But most midlife women in India don’t receive routine screenings for these conditions.
This oversight is not just clinical; it is cultural. Our health infrastructure has been designed around childbearing, not longevity. And while maternal health deserves its due attention, the silence around post-reproductive health care is costing lives.
Rethinking the System: A New Framework for Women’s Health
It’s time for a radical shift. At Apollo, we’ve begun piloting midlife metabolic clinics—multidisciplinary hubs that screen for and manage chronic conditions in women aged 40 and above. These clinics don’t treat menopause as an isolated event but as part of a broader metabolic journey. They integrate bone density tests, cardiovascular and cancer screenings, mental health counselling, and personalised nutrition plans into routine care.
Moreover, we are advocating for gender-specific medical protocols that recognise the biological and hormonal differences in how diseases present and progress in women. For example, while heart disease is the leading cause of death among Indian women, symptoms often go unrecognised due to their divergence from male-centric diagnostic models.
The Role of Early Intervention
Early menstrual irregularities, changes in mood, skin issues, or unexplained weight shifts are not just cosmetic or transient concerns—they are clinical clues. Educating women to observe these patterns and seek timely intervention could significantly reduce their risk of developing full-blown chronic diseases later in life.
Healthcare providers, too, must recalibrate their approach. A woman in her 30s presenting with period irregularities should not be dismissed with a generic prescription. Instead, her care plan should include screening for insulin resistance, PCOS, thyroid function, and cardiovascular and cancer risk markers.
Beyond the Clinic: Policy and Awareness
A true transformation will require more than clinical change. It demands policy reform. India’s public health programmes must expand beyond maternal care to include preventive health checkups for midlife women, public awareness campaigns on perimenopausal changes, and insurance schemes that cover long-term chronic care.
Educational institutions and workplaces must also play their part by creating safe spaces for menstrual and menopausal conversations and by supporting women through these physiological transitions with empathy and resources.
The Path Ahead
If the body whispers before it screams, the menstrual cycle is the first whisper. It tells us when something is off—long before a formal diagnosis appears on a chart. Yet most women, conditioned to normalise pain, irregularity, and discomfort, miss the message. And when the silence stretches too long, the consequences often become irreversible.
The question is not whether we can build a better system for women’s health. The question is: Will we listen in time?
Because a missed period isn’t always about pregnancy. Sometimes, it’s about a much larger, more complex story—one that could change the trajectory of a woman’s entire life.
- First Published:
May 15, 2025, 10:05 IST
SOURCE : NEWS 18