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What is menopause, really? Why most Indian women miss the early signs

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Menopause is a natural biological milestone that marks the end of a woman's menstrual cycles. Clinically, it's established after 12 consecutive months without a period. But it doesn’t happen overnight. It is a multi-year transition, beginning with perimenopause – when hormones begin to vary, cycles become erratic, and symptoms creep in unnoticed. This stage of life also brings vasomotor symptoms, sleep disturbance, mood changes and longer-term risks such as bone and cardiovascular change, and the timing and intensity vary widely for everyone.

Why the early signs are commonly missed
Many Indian women tend to dismiss early menopausal symptoms , attributing them to stress, workload, or poor sleep rather than recognizing them as hormonal changes . Studies from across the country have reported a wide range of physical and emotional symptoms, from joint pain and fatigue to hot flushes, insomnia, and anxiety. Yet, awareness of their link to menopause remains limited. In a multi-centric study published in the Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care in 2024, nearly two-thirds of women surveyed were unaware that menopause could affect mood, sleep, or bone health. Another review in Climacteric this year, highlighted striking regional variations in awareness and access to menopause care, with rural women significantly less informed about treatment options such as hormone therapy.


Cultural and systemic barriers that obscure the picture

Culturally, discussion of reproductive ageing is often a taboo. Symptoms that affect mood, sexual drive or cognition carry stigma and are normalized as ageing or burnout. Health-seeking patterns also compound the issue: community studies from Haryana and Gurugram report uneven awareness of physical and emotional symptoms, and low familiarity with menopausal hormone therapy and other evidence-based options.

Why this matters, and what should change
Missed perimenopausal signs are not merely an inconvenience. They forfeit opportunities for symptom relief, lifestyle interventions that protect bone and heart health, and timely counselling about fertility implications for those still considering pregnancy. Population trends mean more Indian women will spend decades post-menopause, increasing the need for public-health imperatives.

Practical next steps for clinicians and women
We should move beyond menstrual timing as the sole cue and ask actively about sleep, night sweats, memory lapses and sexual changes in women from their late thirties onwards. Public education must normalize the transition and expand access to menopausal services in district-level care. When recognized timely, simple interventions such as personalized lifestyle advice, targeted therapies and bone-health screening can improve quality of life.

Dr Rakhi Goyal, Fertility Specialist, Birla Fertility & IVF, Chandigarh

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