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The Dr Louise Newson Podcast

118 - Testosterone: not just icing on the cake with Rachel Dawber

The Dr Louise Newson Podcast

Dr Louise Newson

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.7937 Ratings

🗓️ 28 September 2021

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Rachel was a very active 45-year-old, who loved the outdoors and her job as a specialist teacher when her fit and healthy body began suffering with one problem after another. Joint problems and crushing fatigue curtailed her hobbies of hiking, climbing and cycling. The following months saw her list of unexplained symptoms grow and grow from being in constant pain, migraines, and gum problems, to palpitations, dry mouth and eyes, anxiety and electric shock sensations. Within 2 years, she describes herself as ‘just a shell who couldn’t leave the house’, she had given up her job, and living with this version of Rachel had a huge impact on her husband and son. After multiple trips to the GP and blood tests, she was given a diagnosis of chronic fatigue syndrome.

In this episode, Rachel tells her story to Dr Louise Newson and takes listeners through her journey, including self-diagnosis and battles to get the help she knew she needed. After beginning on estrogen replacement and seeing some mild improvements but still experiencing severe fatigue, she learnt about testosterone and its importance for energy and stamina. Now, 6 months after starting on testosterone, Rachel describes the improvement as ‘life-changing’. She feels a fully functioning human again, is able to work part time, and even manage a 5 mile walk.

Dr Newson explains what testosterone does, why we need it, and why it can be so hard to get hold of the hormone at your local GP practice. Louise reassures listeners that she is working hard with NHS England on this very matter and is hopeful that change will come.

Both Louise and Rachel agree that testosterone should not be described as the ‘icing’ on the HRT cake but a crucial ingredient of the cake itself.

Rachel’s top 3 tips:

  1. Remember GPs aren’t trained in peri/menopause, so go armed with useful information and the NICE guidelines to help you have a factual conversation.
  2. Don’t give up trying to get the help you need.
  3. Be kind to yourself and listen to your body.

Note: Rachel had to see a menopause specialist to get her initial prescriptions for testosterone. After lots of persevering on her part, it has now been agreed to be prescribed via her usual NHS GP.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Neuson Health Menopause podcast. I'm Dr. Louise Newson, a GP and menopause

0:15.8

specialist and I'm also the founder of the menopause charity. In addition, I run the Newston Health

0:22.5

Menopause and Well-Being Clinic here in Stratford-upon-Avon.

0:31.6

So today I have with me, Rachel, who I've only actually just met, she very kindly emailed

0:36.4

me out the blue to tell me about her

0:38.3

transformational experience with taking HRT, which included testosterone, actually. So welcome, Rachel,

0:44.8

to the podcast today. Hello. Hi. Nice to meet you. So I get lots of emails from lots of women,

0:50.5

lots of messages through social media. And they're one of the reasons that makes them work so hard actually because I realise the more I expose myself, the more people access

0:59.4

me or my team, the more I realise how many people are suffering, not just in the UK, but worldwide,

1:06.0

because of their inability to just reclaim their own hormones actually. None of this is rocket science. None of this

1:12.4

is complicated medicine. None of this is dangerous prescribing. But it has become this real

1:18.3

cloak and dagger specialty that people can talk about. People can't access treatment. And,

1:24.0

you know, women are really suffering. And I do think there's a lot of gender inequality

1:28.3

problems as well here. So I'd be really keen and delighted, Rachel, if you could just set the

1:34.7

scene and start your story and just tell us a bit about what happened and then why you got in touch

1:40.7

with me. Okay, yeah, of course. I think my journey really goes back about five years.

1:46.6

I was a very much, I'm an all-action girl. I'm one of these women. I run in the mountains. I rock

1:53.0

climb, I'm mountain bike. I've done quite a few endurance races in my time, running races,

1:59.7

caving, mine exploration, like anything, I'll give

2:03.2

it a go, girl's scrambling, I'm just like an oral action girl and my job. I'm a specialist

2:07.5

teacher. I work with children with social, emotional mental health problems, but I take

2:12.4

their learning outdoors and try and improve academic progress and social, emotional, mental health and outdoor environment.

...

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