From Publishers Weekly
Posner, a researcher and Webmaster (she has worked with her husband, Gerald, on several books), here chronicles an unconventional journey into menopause. Informed by her physician at age 46 that she was "in full-blown menopause"--and that, in order to avoid osteoporosis and a reduced metabolism, she required immediate hormone replacement therapy--Posner hesitated. When her doctor arrogantly dismissed her concerns about the risks of estrogen replacement (her mother and two aunts had had breast cancer), Posner was inspired to use her formidable research skills to look for alternatives. What she found was enough information to design a program tailor-made to naturally eliminate the negative physical aspects of menopause: hot flashes, diminished bone density and thinning muscle tissue. In clear and vivid language, Posner describes how she successfully experimented with herbs, vitamins, diet and exercise until she found a hormone-free combination that counteracted all these symptoms. The program, she asserts, made her body both leaner and stronger, improved the condition of her hair and skin and restored her libido. After her last medical tests, even her estrogen-pushing physician acknowledged that she was in excellent shape and had lost no bone density. This is not a medical text--Posner is careful to caution women that this program may not be appropriate for everyone--but it is an interesting and inspiring account by a woman who decided to take responsibility for her body and her health.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Two women who have experienced menopause share their personal stories along with advice for others. Posner, who had a family history of breast cancer, decided to write a book about her trial-and-error experience with nonhormonal approaches to treating the symptoms of menopause. Wanting to avoid both natural and synthetic estrogens, she researched and mapped her own course of treatment, relying on exercise, diet, and massive amounts of supplements. Written more like a autobiography than a medical book, her story isn't really that interesting, and Posner throws out some options like acupuncture because she "just felt it was not the way I wanted to treat menopause." An optional purchase, recommended only where there is a great interest in first-person health narratives. Women who really want authoritative help deciding what they should do will find better information in Moore's book. Moore also mentions her personal experience and does, in fact, recommend some of the same therapies that Posner uses, but this is advice coming from a medical practitioner. As a physician in private practice, she advocates starting small, using the least toxic treatments for symptoms such as hot flashes, migraines, and osteoporosis. She is open to all types of treatments ranging from homeopathy to hormone replacement. A more balanced treatment of menopause that includes allopathic and alternative therapies, her book is recommended for public and consumer health libraries.
-Elizabeth Williams, Houston Acad. of Medicine-Texas Medical Ctr. Lib. Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.