Hormone replacement therapy
Press Release — Recent controversy over Suzanne Somers is a disservice to
women
November 20, 2006, Yarmouth, Maine - Women to Women, one of the
nation’s leading providers of women’s healthcare and medical information,
spoke out today on the controversy surrounding Suzanne Somers’s new book,
Ageless, in which she advocates lifelong use of bioidentical hormones.
Marcelle Pick, NP, cofounder of Women to Women, explains, “Having watched
the Larry King show this week on Suzanne Somers, I have to say that this controversy
has become a disservice to women. The real choices women have to deal with menopause
symptoms are getting lost in the name-calling and misinformation. The effect is
to leave women confused and feeling there’s nowhere to turn and no one they
can trust.
“Having used compounded bioidentical hormones in our medical practice for
over 15 years, we want to sort out fact from fiction so women can make choices that
are right for them. And they do have good choices!”
Marcy Holmes, NP, Certified Menopause Clinician at Women to Women, agrees. “The
people attacking Suzanne Somers are saying that bioidentical hormones are dangerous,
or at least as dangerous as synthetic HRT. While the evidence isn’t perfect,
what we know to date clearly shows the risks of bioidentical hormones are lower
than conventional HRT. Study after study has shown that conventional HRT carries
serious health risks, and our clinical practice confirms that. There simply aren’t
comparable studies for compounded bioidentical hormones. In our clinic, however,
we have treated over 10,000 women with compounded bioidentical hormones and we have
not seen significant side effects or risks from usage.”
Marcelle Pick, who helped pioneer the use of bioidentical hormones in America, adds,
“We were among the very first to use compounded bioidentical hormones in America
and I still prescribe them daily. In all that time I’ve seen minimal evidence
of unusual side effects or long-term health problems. The opposite is true of women
who come to me on Prempro and Premarin, the major forms of conventional HRT.
“It’s hard to separate money from science. Who would be willing to fund
a large-scale longitudinal study on the safety of compounded bioidentical hormones,
which would cost millions of dollars? They can’t be patented, so no drug company
will.
“And let’s be frank here. Some of the doctors who are most critical
of Suzanne Somers — including Wolf Utian, who appeared on the Larry King show
this week — are paid in one way or another by the pharmaceutical companies,
whose profits are threatened by widespread use of compounded bioidentical hormones.
So instead of attacking the flaws within Somers’s program, they go after bioidentical
hormones as a whole. That’s their real target; Suzanne is just a convenient
means to that end.”
Marcy Holmes interjects, “But Suzanne Somers clearly invites criticism. For
example, she says that bioidentical hormones aren’t drugs. That’s
going too far. Of course they’re drugs, and they should be used with great
caution. And the notion that a 60-year-old woman should take drugs so she has the
hormonal levels of a 20-year-old — especially on an indefinite basis —
is both untested and unnatural. How does it make sense to say natural is best and
then advocate something so completely unnatural?”
Ms. Pick continued, “That’s right, it isn’t natural at all. Maybe
worse, it isn’t necessary either. The level of hormones a 60-year-old would
have to take to match a 20-year-old is pretty high. And I know from my practice
that almost all 60-year-old women can feel fabulous either without hormones or with
just a small supplement. So why recommend that all women take more than is necessary?”
Ms. Holmes joined in. “I have particular problems with the Wiley Protocol,
which Suzanne Somers recommends in her book,” she said. “Wiley has been
criticized for not having any medical qualifications, but frankly that’s not
the real problem. A medical degree is no guarantee of being objective or right.
The bigger issue is that she’s making or implying cure-all claims about compounded
bioidentical hormones for which there is no scientific evidence. She cites her own
study of 80 women — but that sample size is so small it’s irresponsible.”
“And there’s also a big issue here that no one has mentioned,”
said Ms. Pick, “but it must be mentioned. Who wants to have periods ‘til
they’re 90? What’s so great about riding the ups and downs of a menstrual
cycle forever? I would ask each woman to remember the best day of her average menstrual
cycle — the creativity, confidence and vitality of that day. Well, in menopause,
every day should be like that. And it can be.”
“That’s the ideal outcome,” said Ms. Holmes, “but a significant
percentage of women need hormone supplementation to reach that point. We think those
women are best served by bioidentical hormones. Keep in mind that there is a middle
ground here. Compounded bioidentical hormones at the center of this controversy
are prepared by a special pharmacy under the direction of your medical practitioner
in doses matched to your needs. But other bioidentical hormones are available in
a number of doses from conventional pharmaceutical companies under names like Vivelle,
Climara and Prometrium, just to name a few. These drugs have been through standard
FDA trials and shown to have fewer risks than Premarin or Prempro. We’ve also
used these drugs in our clinical practice for years with good outcomes. So women
really do have good choices. To try to limit those choices is a disservice to women
and all women should oppose it.”
“You’re right; that’s the immediate danger,” Ms. Pick agreed.
“But I feel another disservice is being done to women by the message the media
attributes to Suzanne Somers. The message is that women at 60 should look and feel
like a 20-year-old and that they can with a magic pill. Of course Ms. Somers looks
wonderful and many women obviously wish they looked that good as well.
“What I wish the media would emphasize instead is what a go-getter Suzanne
is, how full of energy and vitality she is, how hard she worked to find her path
to wellness. And that she has done tremendous work on her health, starting with
exercise and diet and the right nutritional supplements. Only at the end of that
process, when she still didn’t feel great, did she search out and begin using
bioidentical hormones. Every woman can and should work through those same basic
stages, and if they did, the great majority wouldn’t need bioidentical hormones
at all. But for those few who, like Suzanne, might still need them, the choice to
use them should continue to be available to them.
“The bottom line is this: no hormone supplement is a magic bullet, but the
choice to use them belongs in the hands of women because each woman is her own authority
and her body is the expert she should trust.”
About Women to Women
Founded over 25 years ago, Women to Women is America’s leading medical clinic
devoted to health care for women, by women. Through its practice, website, and publications,
it helps over a million women a year find wellness through the combination of conventional
and alternative medicine.
Contact: Donna Poulin, Practice Manager, Women to Women, 3 Marina
Road, Yarmouth, Maine, 04096. Tel: 800-340-5382. E-mail:
dpoulin@womentowomen.com.
Our Personal Program is a great place to start
The Personal Program promotes natural hormonal balance with nutritional supplements,
our exclusive endocrine support formula, dietary and lifestyle guidance, and optional
phone consultations with our Nurse–Educators. It is a convenient, at-home
version of what we recommend to all our patients at the clinic.
If you have questions, don't hesitate to call us toll-free at
1-800-798-7902. We're here to listen and help.
Last Modified Date: 05/22/2011