Literature DB >> 11400220

Menopause, local biologies, and cultures of aging.

M Lock1, P Kaufert.   

Abstract

Menopause marks the end of menstruation, once generally accepted as the closure of women's reproductive lives. The current medical view of menopause, however, is as a pathological event with its own distinct set of symptoms and diseases. Researchers have described women as facing a dramatic increase in the risk of heart disease, osteoporosis, stroke, and Alzheimer's, all as the result of the impact of changing hormone levels, particularly the decline in estrogen. The clinical literature has interpreted these findings in terms of the absolute necessity of replacing these lost hormones for all women who are menopausal regardless of any other physiological, social, or cultural characteristic they might possess. Using research done in Japan, Canada, and the United States, this paper challenges the notion of a universal menopause by showing that both the symptoms reported at menopause and the post-menopause disease profiles vary from one study population to the next. For most of the symptoms commonly associated with menopause in the medical literature, rates are much lower for Japanese women than for women in the United States and Canada, although they are comparable to rates reported from studies in Thailand and China. Mortality and morbidity data from these same societies are used to show that post-menopausal women are also not equally at risk for heart disease, breast cancer, or osteoporosis. Rather than universality, the paper suggests that it is important to think in terms of "local biologies", which reflect the very different social and physical conditions of women's lives from one society to another.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11400220     DOI: 10.1002/ajhb.1081

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Biol        ISSN: 1042-0533            Impact factor:   1.937


  20 in total

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4.  Local biologies and HIV/AIDS in highlands Papua, Indonesia.

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5.  Menopausal symptoms among four major ethnic groups in the United States.

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7.  Interactions Between Diet, Physical Activity, and the Sociocultural Environment for Older Adult Health in the Urban Subarctic.

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Review 8.  Multidisciplinarity in Microbiome Research: A Challenge and Opportunity to Rethink Causation, Variability, and Scale.

Authors:  Katherine R Amato; Corinne F Maurice; Karen Guillemin; Tamara Giles-Vernick
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9.  The cultural context of "successful aging" among older women weavers in a northern Okinawan village: the role of productive activity.

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10.  The Global and the Local: Health in Latin American Indigenous Women.

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