Women's knowledge about the physical and emotional changes associated with menopause
- PMID: 10427647
- DOI: 10.1300/J013v29n02_03
Women's knowledge about the physical and emotional changes associated with menopause
Abstract
In 1992, a survey was undertaken to study women's knowledge of the physical and emotional changes associated with menopause. Two groups of midlife women: a random sample (n = 381) and a sample of women who attended menopause seminars (n = 95) were asked to select from a list of 39 changes those they thought were directly caused by menopause. Information from readily available books written for a general audience was used to construct the marking guide for a "commonly available knowledge" score. A template for a "biomedical" knowledge score based on an estrogen deficiency perspective of menopause was derived from recently published academic medical literature. The mean score for the commonly available knowledge items was 27 out of 39 (69.2% correct). The mean biomedical knowledge score was lower, 19.3 out of 35 (55.1% correct). While the two groups of women were significantly different in terms of current and past hormone replacement therapy (HRT) use, we found no differences between them in the mean commonly available knowledge or biomedical knowledge scores. This finding challenges the widely held assumption that active information-seekers are more interested and have a better level of knowledge than the general population. The findings also suggest that women are less likely to accept a biomedical model of menopause and that they are using HRT for a multiplicity of reasons, not just those related to estrogen deficiency.
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