While researching a project on the Indian woman’s experience of menopause, I
chanced upon a clinic in a north Mumbai suburb with a freshly- painted board
advertising a ‘Clinic for Elderly Women. The doctor (who turned out to be a
general practitioner) saying I could sit in on consultations if the patient did
not mind.
The patient was a 49- year- old woman, S, whose complaint was a constant body
ache, head aches, depression and a general feeling of being useless. She said
she often felt suicidal but “even that seemed like too much work.” Her children
had grown up and left the house. Her husband travels frequently, leaving her
alone. “When my husband is away, I am very lonely. I have nice neighbours
but I miss my family. I can’t do without the TV and eat all the time. My husband
tells me I look too fat.” She believes he no longer finds her attractive.
After listening to S’s litany of complaints the doctor asked her age and her
menstrual pattern. She had not menstruated for over a year. With this two brief
queries the doctor wrote out a prescription for Estriol, a lower dose (and
currently the cheapest) Hormone Replacement Therapy drug, told S to take it
twice a day and asked for a fee of Rs 175. The entire visit took barely 15
minutes.
The doctor did not ask S about her family medical history: he did not tell
her what she was taking, the possible side effects, the need for monitoring. He
simply told her that she would get complete ‘shanti’ with the drug, and that she
could take it for the rest of her life, though Estriol is normally prescribed
for a three- month period with the possibility of another three months if there
has been no relief. Estriol is normally recommended to menopausal patients
complaining of common physiological symptoms of menopause.
Speaking with S outside the clinic, I asked her if there was a family history
of breast cancer or diabetes, and if she herself had gall stones (all
contraindications for HRT use). She said no, but, if someone had cancer or
diabetes we would not have known.
The doctor said it was S’s first visit to him. Why did he suggest that she go
on HRT? “Didn’t you hear’! She said she no longer menstruated. Estriol
is very good for women of this age .” Further questions about contraindications
for HRT use were dismissed with a wave of his hand. I asked him whether, in his
capacity as a GP, he felt confident about prescribing hormonal treatment. He
said, “All the medical reps say it is the best thing for ageing women. They
say that every doctor buys it.” I asked him when he had first heard of HRT.
He said a medical representative had introduced him to it about two years ago
but he had started prescribing it only recently.
Such incidents highlight the frightening lack of knowledge amongst some
sections of the medical professsion about the contraindications of HRT. It also
points to the desperate need for counselling services. There is a growing belief
that most women would benefit more from counselling than clinical interventions
like HRT.
Lyla Bavadam,Seaview, 71 Wodehouse Road, Colaba, Mumbai, 400
005