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Is there a natural solution to the over-medicalisation of women?

Sebastian Pole

I started Herbal Reality in 2020 to share traditional, scientific and practical insights into herbal medicine that informs a deeper understanding of the power of plants and clinical herbalism.

Along with my herbal studies and clinical practice, much of what I have learned about the intricacies of the herbal world has come from my time with Pukka Herbs that I co-founded in 2001.

I have travelled to hundreds of organic farms around the world pioneering sustainable herbal value chains, rigorous quality systems and a regenerative approach to business.

I now work with Earthsong Seeds, a medicinal seed project in the UK growing over 100 species to encourage the tradition of the self-empowered apothecary; growing and making health-remedies yourself. I am also a trustee of Earthsong Foundation and serve on the Advisory Board of the American Herbal Pharmacopoeia.

I have written Ayurvedic Medicine: The Principles of Traditional Practice, A Pukka Life, and Cleanse, Nurture, Restore with Herbal Tea.

In this article, we want to explore whether it is best practice for drugs to be the first port of call in the natural evolution of women’s health from menarche, through the menstrual years and menopause?

We know that over-medicalisation has many different causes. These include the current drug-based medical paradigm, under or over-diagnosis, a conservative risk base for disease reduction targets, patient demand for treatment and, over the last 30 years, a surge in medicalisation of preventable diseases. Despite being generally healthier and longer-lived than men, women especially fall victim to this phenomenon.

The medicalisation of girls and women starts early in life; research shows that a third of teenagers taking the pill do so to treat menstrual cramps (Guttmacher Institute) rather than to prevent pregnancy. This is despite a Cochrane review (2001 Proctor et al) stating that ‘no conclusions can be made about the efficacy of commonly used modern lower dose combined oral contraceptives for dysmenorrhoea.’ More generally, 14% of women using the pill do so solely to treat dysmenorrhoea, acne or endometriosis.  Hormone treatments are associated with multiple side-effects – weight and mood changes, lowered libido, depression headaches, clotting risks – that may lead to further medication. These, coupled with the loss of the benefits of a natural menstrual cycle, beg the question ‘can we do anything better to help young women?’.

However it doesn’t stop there. The current menopause conversation shines a welcome light on the need for a better understanding of menopause. But the push for HRT within this conversation exemplifies this trend towards medicalisation. During menopause over a third of women take HRT for relieving the uncomfortable symptoms, despite it linked with a three-fold increase in the risk of breast cancer and more blood clots. The UK Health Service recommends minimal use of HRT but offers minimal other empowering solutions, even specifically stating that complementary solutions should not be sought.

Further over-medicalisation of women, is apparent in the fact that women are prescribed anti-depressants twice as much as men with no evidence that women are more depressed than men. Given that many of the health issues that arise during a woman’s life have the potential to be managed naturally, why are we medicating women before educating them with a clear understanding of their menstrual health, effective diet, lifestyle and natural herbal solutions? Surely there is benefit to the individual, the health system and society as a whole if a multi-dimensional approach is taken?

Sebastian Pole

I started Herbal Reality in 2020 to share traditional, scientific and practical insights into herbal medicine that informs a deeper understanding of the power of plants and clinical herbalism. Along... Read more

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