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The Menopause Diet Plan: A Natural Guide to Managing Hormones, Health, and Happiness Kindle Edition
Menopause is uncharted territory for women, and it can be difficult to know how to ease the effects of hormonal changes that can often start in your 40s. With honesty and optimism, The Menopause Diet Plan encourages a positive, fad-free approach to managing your physical and emotional health during perimenopause and menopause. It highlights current scientific knowledge about the best diet and lifestyle choices to manage your weight; keep your heart, brain, and bones healthy; and decrease the risk for cancer and other chronic conditions. It also offers natural strategies to help diminish hot flashes, manage sleep difficulties and mood swings, improve energy, and more.
The Menopause Diet Plan takes a unique approach to eating before, during, and after menopause. Registered dietitians Hillary Wright and Elizabeth Ward provide a customizable, plant-based eating plan that is rich in protein, fiber, and other beneficial nutrients, moderate in carbohydrates, and low in saturated fat, sodium, and added sugars. Balancing evidence-based advice with real-life circumstances and personal experience, it combines the best of the world's healthiest diets with the latest nutrition research for women in the menopause transition. Recipes such as Peanut Butter Smoothie, Chicken Italiano, and Chocolate Oatmeal Energy Balls make it easier to eat delicious, satisfying foods that nourish your body.
With a comprehensive approach to better health, The Menopause Diet Plan helps women take charge of their well-being and live life to the fullest.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRodale Books
- Publication dateSeptember 8, 2020
- File size4.2 MB
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Review
About the Author
Elizabeth Ward, MS, RDN, is a registered dietitian with more than 30 years of experience counseling patients and writing about nutrition and health. She is an experienced recipe developer and food photographer and the author or coauthor of several books, including Super Nutrition After 50, Live Longer and Better, and Expect the Best: Your Guide to Healthy Eating Before, During, and After Pregnancy. Ward blogs about a healthy lifestyle at Better Is the New Perfect.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Why You Need the Menopause Diet Plan
Before menopause I could eat anything I wanted without gaining weight, but after menopause I put on 15 pounds even though I hadn’t changed my eating or exercise habits. —Sue, age 59
“What should I eat for menopause?”
That’s a question we’ve heard many times over the years, mostly as part of a conversation that typically begins with weight concerns. Between the two of us, we have many decades of experience helping people navigate weight issues, but to be honest, prior to experiencing menopause ourselves, we couldn’t fully relate to the specific challenges this stage of life presents.
Though we understood that women’s bodies change with declining estrogen levels and aging, we may have been somewhat skeptical when listening to women describe how their usual eating and exercise routines were no longer working. Now that we’re both past menopause, however, these women’s stories resonate with us—and how! Just like the women who have gone before us, we’ve gained some belly fat, fended off hot flashes, and dreamed about getting a good night’s sleep again. Our own adjustments to menopause led to our search for the best diet and lifestyle habits for midlife, and beyond. That’s how we came up with the Menopause Diet Plan (MDP).
We’re firm believers that it’s possible to stay fit and healthy despite your changing hormones by prioritizing time for self-care, which includes enjoying nutritious food. While the MDP is about much more than what the scale reads, we’re glad women ask about weight because it opens up the menopause conversation. When our mothers went through “the change,” menopause was rarely a topic talked about much, even among women who were in the same boat. Thank goodness this is not your mother’s menopause! We know a great deal more about women’s health now, and the MDP takes full advantage of the scientific research on how nutrition and exercise influence physical health and emotional well-being.
Making Sense of Menopause Nutrition
There’s a lot of information out there about what to eat. However, very little of it is unique to the menopause transition, which often starts in the mid-40s and lasts into the 60s. In addition, food choices aren’t the whole story when it comes to menopause. There are several other issues to consider, and they are woven into the MDP, which is designed to prevent or manage health conditions that become more common during midlife, promote a better mood, limit hot flashes, and much more.
The foundation of the MDP includes five core principles:
Eat according to your body clock. Does this sound familiar? You skimp on food during the day and eat most of your calories at dinner and afterwards, and you can’t figure out why you’re gaining weight and your energy is low. We are ruled by natural body rhythms that affect our health, and when you eat matters. Consistent food intake regulates your energy levels, heads off crabbiness, and helps prevent you from going overboard because you let yourself get too hungry.
Meal timing is one of the most important principles of the MDP. As you will see in the chapters ahead, managing meal timing is gaining ground for its role in weight control, regulating blood glucose levels, getting better sleep, and possibly lowering cancer risk.
Focus on plant foods. Plant-rich eating plans typically supply a balance of healthy fat, fiber, vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients that help reduce blood pressure and LDL cholesterol (“bad cholesterol”), lower the risk of diabetes, and promote a healthy weight. Following a plant-based diet may be particularly beneficial for women before, during, and after menopause, in many ways.
Two of the most popular plant-based approaches to eating are the Mediterranean-style diet and the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet. Both plans regularly top international lists of the world’s healthiest diets for their recommendations to eat more fruits and vegetables than the average American consumes, opt for whole grains most of the time, and include plant proteins like nuts, seeds, and legumes more often. Both styles of eating strongly encourage limiting added sugars and refined carbohydrates, but neither forbids them.
When followed closely, the DASH diet is widely regarded as an effective way to treat or prevent high blood pressure. It’s based on prescribed amounts of whole grains, fruits, vegetables, lean meat, fish, poultry, beans, nuts, and low-fat dairy foods, and it’s particularly low in saturated fat and high in fiber. DASH is also rich in potassium, magnesium, and calcium to help with blood pressure control, and lower in sodium than the typical American diet. Lower sodium versions of DASH—1,500 milligrams daily—produce even greater reductions in blood pressure, but may be difficult to follow in the long run.
The DASH diet is a lifelong approach to better health, and while it’s not a weight-loss “diet,” you might shed some extra pounds because of better food choices. For many people, the DASH diet is a big change to how they eat, because DASH suggests a specific number of servings of certain foods every day. See the Resources section in this book for more on the DASH eating plan.
The Mediterranean-style eating plan promotes seafood over poultry, and suggests less beef, pork, and lamb. It also allows low to moderate amounts of wine with meals. (However, if you don’t drink, there’s no need to start doing so in the name of better health.) Following a Mediterranean-style pattern reduces the chances for being overweight, and women may experience fewer symptoms associated with menopause, thereby improving their quality of life. It also happens that this plant-based approach is good for your gut, and can lower the risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer, and may help improve mood in menopausal women.
In constructing the MDP, we blended recommendations from the Mediterranean and DASH diets that encourage ample amounts of whole fruits and vegetables, whole grains, nuts, and seeds to help you feel satisfied so that you don’t reach for that extra serving or two of snack chips, candy, and cookies.
Our approach is likely higher in protein and lower in carbohydrates than the Mediterranean and DASH plans; and like these plans, the MDP encourages you to eat more plant proteins and seafood, as well as nuts, nut butters, seeds, avocados, olive oil, and other sources of fat that are healthy and satisfying. Collectively, our recommendations emphasize the most “anti-inflammatory” aspects of the Mediterranean, DASH, and other plant-based diets. That’s because most health issues that surface during the menopause transition and afterwards, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and cognitive problems, involve inflammation. And, like all plant-based plans, the MDP promotes digestive health by helping to prevent constipation and nourishes the gut in a way that influences overall health.
What is a plant-based eating plan?
Though evidence suggests that plant-based patterns benefit overall health the most, “plant-based” doesn’t mean animal-free. However, you may need to eat smaller portions of animal foods while increasing your intake of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and legumes.
So, what exactly does “plant-based” mean? At first pass, it may sound like vegetarianism, and it can be. But there are many forms of plant-based eating:
• A vegan diet includes only foods from plant sources, like fruits, vegetables, whole grains, soy, legumes, nuts, and seeds.
• Lacto-ovo vegetarians eat plant foods, eggs, and dairy products, such as milk, yogurt, and cheese, but no animal flesh or seafood.
• Flexitarians consider themselves vegetarians for the most part but also eat seafood, poultry, and perhaps, some red meat, or not!
Despite the differences, all vegetarian-type eating plans focus on getting most of their nutrients from plants. Plant-based eating does not ban certain foods, as is the case with many overly restrictive fad diets, but rather encourages some foods over others. You don’t need to be a vegetarian for better health, but you may need to significantly up your fruit, vegetable, and whole grains to achieve the goals outlined in the Menopause Diet Plan.
Curb carbohydrates and cue the protein. Research suggests that many menopausal women do not consume the protein they need. Based on scientific evidence, the MDP includes more protein than is typically suggested for women over 50. While it’s important to include enough protein, timing matters, too. Eating protein regularly throughout the day helps to keep you feeling fuller for longer while nourishing your muscles and bones.
When you add protein to your eating plan, you may need to shed some carbohydrate and dietary fat for balance. We have nothing against foods rich in carbohydrates, such as whole grains, fruits, and vegetables. However, you may be eating more carbohydrates than your body can handle at midlife, and that can make weight control more difficult.
While there is no one-size-fits-all approach to weight management in the menopausal years, a recent large observational study from the Women’s Health Initiative found that some eating patterns are better than others.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Why You Need the Menopause Diet Plan
Before menopause I could eat anything I wanted without gaining weight, but after menopause I put on 15 pounds even though I hadn’t changed my eating or exercise habits. —Sue, age 59
“What should I eat for menopause?”
That’s a question we’ve heard many times over the years, mostly as part of a conversation that typically begins with weight concerns. Between the two of us, we have many decades of experience helping people navigate weight issues, but to be honest, prior to experiencing menopause ourselves, we couldn’t fully relate to the specific challenges this stage of life presents.
Though we understood that women’s bodies change with declining estrogen levels and aging, we may have been somewhat skeptical when listening to women describe how their usual eating and exercise routines were no longer working. Now that we’re both past menopause, however, these women’s stories resonate with us—and how! Just like the women who have gone before us, we’ve gained some belly fat, fended off hot flashes, and dreamed about getting a good night’s sleep again. Our own adjustments to menopause led to our search for the best diet and lifestyle habits for midlife, and beyond. That’s how we came up with the Menopause Diet Plan (MDP).
We’re firm believers that it’s possible to stay fit and healthy despite your changing hormones by prioritizing time for self-care, which includes enjoying nutritious food. While the MDP is about much more than what the scale reads, we’re glad women ask about weight because it opens up the menopause conversation. When our mothers went through “the change,” menopause was rarely a topic talked about much, even among women who were in the same boat. Thank goodness this is not your mother’s menopause! We know a great deal more about women’s health now, and the MDP takes full advantage of the scientific research on how nutrition and exercise influence physical health and emotional well-being.
Making Sense of Menopause Nutrition
There’s a lot of information out there about what to eat. However, very little of it is unique to the menopause transition, which often starts in the mid-40s and lasts into the 60s. In addition, food choices aren’t the whole story when it comes to menopause. There are several other issues to consider, and they are woven into the MDP, which is designed to prevent or manage health conditions that become more common during midlife, promote a better mood, limit hot flashes, and much more.
The foundation of the MDP includes five core principles:
Eat according to your body clock. Does this sound familiar? You skimp on food during the day and eat most of your calories at dinner and afterwards, and you can’t figure out why you’re gaining weight and your energy is low. We are ruled by natural body rhythms that affect our health, and when you eat matters. Consistent food intake regulates your energy levels, heads off crabbiness, and helps prevent you from going overboard because you let yourself get too hungry.
Meal timing is one of the most important principles of the MDP. As you will see in the chapters ahead, managing meal timing is gaining ground for its role in weight control, regulating blood glucose levels, getting better sleep, and possibly lowering cancer risk.
Focus on plant foods. Plant-rich eating plans typically supply a balance of healthy fat, fiber, vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients that help reduce blood pressure and LDL cholesterol (“bad cholesterol”), lower the risk of diabetes, and promote a healthy weight. Following a plant-based diet may be particularly beneficial for women before, during, and after menopause, in many ways.
Two of the most popular plant-based approaches to eating are the Mediterranean-style diet and the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet. Both plans regularly top international lists of the world’s healthiest diets for their recommendations to eat more fruits and vegetables than the average American consumes, opt for whole grains most of the time, and include plant proteins like nuts, seeds, and legumes more often. Both styles of eating strongly encourage limiting added sugars and refined carbohydrates, but neither forbids them.
When followed closely, the DASH diet is widely regarded as an effective way to treat or prevent high blood pressure. It’s based on prescribed amounts of whole grains, fruits, vegetables, lean meat, fish, poultry, beans, nuts, and low-fat dairy foods, and it’s particularly low in saturated fat and high in fiber. DASH is also rich in potassium, magnesium, and calcium to help with blood pressure control, and lower in sodium than the typical American diet. Lower sodium versions of DASH—1,500 milligrams daily—produce even greater reductions in blood pressure, but may be difficult to follow in the long run.
The DASH diet is a lifelong approach to better health, and while it’s not a weight-loss “diet,” you might shed some extra pounds because of better food choices. For many people, the DASH diet is a big change to how they eat, because DASH suggests a specific number of servings of certain foods every day. See the Resources section in this book for more on the DASH eating plan.
The Mediterranean-style eating plan promotes seafood over poultry, and suggests less beef, pork, and lamb. It also allows low to moderate amounts of wine with meals. (However, if you don’t drink, there’s no need to start doing so in the name of better health.) Following a Mediterranean-style pattern reduces the chances for being overweight, and women may experience fewer symptoms associated with menopause, thereby improving their quality of life. It also happens that this plant-based approach is good for your gut, and can lower the risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer, and may help improve mood in menopausal women.
In constructing the MDP, we blended recommendations from the Mediterranean and DASH diets that encourage ample amounts of whole fruits and vegetables, whole grains, nuts, and seeds to help you feel satisfied so that you don’t reach for that extra serving or two of snack chips, candy, and cookies.
Our approach is likely higher in protein and lower in carbohydrates than the Mediterranean and DASH plans; and like these plans, the MDP encourages you to eat more plant proteins and seafood, as well as nuts, nut butters, seeds, avocados, olive oil, and other sources of fat that are healthy and satisfying. Collectively, our recommendations emphasize the most “anti-inflammatory” aspects of the Mediterranean, DASH, and other plant-based diets. That’s because most health issues that surface during the menopause transition and afterwards, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and cognitive problems, involve inflammation. And, like all plant-based plans, the MDP promotes digestive health by helping to prevent constipation and nourishes the gut in a way that influences overall health.
What is a plant-based eating plan?
Though evidence suggests that plant-based patterns benefit overall health the most, “plant-based” doesn’t mean animal-free. However, you may need to eat smaller portions of animal foods while increasing your intake of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and legumes.
So, what exactly does “plant-based” mean? At first pass, it may sound like vegetarianism, and it can be. But there are many forms of plant-based eating:
• A vegan diet includes only foods from plant sources, like fruits, vegetables, whole grains, soy, legumes, nuts, and seeds.
• Lacto-ovo vegetarians eat plant foods, eggs, and dairy products, such as milk, yogurt, and cheese, but no animal flesh or seafood.
• Flexitarians consider themselves vegetarians for the most part but also eat seafood, poultry, and perhaps, some red meat, or not!
Despite the differences, all vegetarian-type eating plans focus on getting most of their nutrients from plants. Plant-based eating does not ban certain foods, as is the case with many overly restrictive fad diets, but rather encourages some foods over others. You don’t need to be a vegetarian for better health, but you may need to significantly up your fruit, vegetable, and whole grains to achieve the goals outlined in the Menopause Diet Plan.
Curb carbohydrates and cue the protein. Research suggests that many menopausal women do not consume the protein they need. Based on scientific evidence, the MDP includes more protein than is typically suggested for women over 50. While it’s important to include enough protein, timing matters, too. Eating protein regularly throughout the day helps to keep you feeling fuller for longer while nourishing your muscles and bones.
When you add protein to your eating plan, you may need to shed some carbohydrate and dietary fat for balance. We have nothing against foods rich in carbohydrates, such as whole grains, fruits, and vegetables. However, you may be eating more carbohydrates than your body can handle at midlife, and that can make weight control more difficult.
While there is no one-size-fits-all approach to weight management in the menopausal years, a recent large observational study from the Women’s Health Initiative found that some eating patterns are better than others.
"Product details
- ASIN : B0826ZB1J7
- Publisher : Rodale Books (September 8, 2020)
- Publication date : September 8, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 4.2 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 323 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : B0BSG8KR6D
- Best Sellers Rank: #291,025 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #59 in Menopause (Kindle Store)
- #203 in Menopause (Books)
- #313 in Nutrition (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
I am a registered dietitian/nutritionist, writer, and mother, and women's health is my passion. Like any mom, I'm busy, and I'm always looking for great tips and simple solutions for feeding my family, and myself, nutritious and delicious foods. That's the stuff of all of my books, including my latest, The Menopause Diet Plan, A Natural Guide to Managing Hormones, Health and Happiness, which I co-wrote with my friend and fellow dietitian, Hillary Wright. Another one of my books, Expect the Best, Your Guide to Healthy Eating Before, During, and After Pregnancy, is in its second edition. The newest version of Expect the Best is packed with more than 60 delicious recipes (including dairy-free, meat-free, and gluten-free options) the entire family can enjoy, as well as dozens of tips for when you're short on time but need to eat. Please visit my blog, www.betteristhenewperfect.com, for simple ways to live a healthier life, and for easy, nutritious recipes to energize and nourish you! And visit Hillary and I on instagram @menopausedietplan.com
HILLARY WRIGHT is a registered dietitian and educator with more than three decades of experience counseling clients on diet and lifestyle change. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Human Nutrition from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and a Master’s of Health Education from Boston University.
Hillary is the Director of Nutrition Counseling for the Domar Center for Mind/Body Health in Waltham, Massachusetts, where she specializes in weight management, diabetes prevention and women’s health. She has written extensively for a variety of health-related publications on the role of diet and behavior modification in the prevention and treatment of common health concerns, and is the author of two books, The PCOS Diet Plan: A Natural Approach to Health for Women with Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, and The Prediabetes Diet Plan: How to Reverse Prediabetes and Prevent Diabetes through Healthy Eating and Exercise. Hillary is the co-author of an upcoming book, The Menopause Diet Plan: A Natural Guide to Managing Hormones, Health and Happiness.
Hillary is also a sought after speaker and consultant to industry, including the nutrition logging and support platform, www.GoodMeasures.com, and has been widely quoted in national media. In addition, she holds a part-time position as a nutritionist at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, supporting patients during and after cancer treatment, and is the proud mom of three wonderful young men who she can proudly say are excellent (or evolving!) cooks!
Hillary's interest in nutrition arose from growing up in a family where two of her five siblings were diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at ages 7 and 11. While contemplating careers, her mother shared how much a registered dietitian at Boston Children's Hospital helped her gain confidence in her ability to manage her young children's diabetes and the idea of helping people both prevent and manage health problems through natural means took hold. To learn more, visit www.hillarywright.com.
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Customers find the book informative and helpful. They appreciate the well-researched content and easy-to-understand language. The pacing is described as solid and reassuring, providing doable, attainable, and sustainable strategies.
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Customers find the book informative and helpful. They say it provides well-researched information about their bodies and needs through menopause. The book is a great resource with practical steps to stay healthy as they age.
"...It’s a great resource and practical, sustainable plan of action." Read more
"...Healthy food choices, vitamins, and exercise. Plus, the authors have the knowledge, statistics, and personal life applications to support their..." Read more
"...with recommendations based on evidence and sense is the message in a practical, applicable and implementable manner without unnecessary elimination..." Read more
"...The diet plan represents a healthy diet. Nothing specific to menopause...." Read more
Customers find the book's language easy to understand and well-written. They appreciate the practical and implementable information and simple recipes. The conversational style makes it a no-brainer for them to follow along.
"...This book is very easy to digest because it is written in a conversational style. It's like a friend talking to you...." Read more
"...and sense is the message in a practical, applicable and implementable manner without unnecessary elimination and with do-able, attainable,..." Read more
"Let me just say, this books speaks my language...." Read more
"...The recipes were also really simple and tasty, and it was written in a way that was easy to understand. Highly recommend!" Read more
Customers find the book provides solid reinforcement for questions and concerns about changes. They appreciate the doable, attainable, and sustainable strategies. The book is accessible and reassuring.
"...without unnecessary elimination and with do-able, attainable, maintainable and sustainable strategies. Leslie Bonci,MPH,RDN,CSSD,LDN,FAND" Read more
"...on this topic and others is well-researched, accessible and reassuring. I know I'm hearing from women who live this advice, not just write about it...." Read more
"...It will serve as solid reinforcement of any questions or concerns you may have on any changes you may be experiencing, backed up with numerous..." Read more
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Step by Step Guide to Menopause from Two Friends
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2023I’ve been perimenopausal for several years and started gaining weight, which led me to buy this book. But even more importantly, I saw my cholesterol and blood pressure creep up. It was to the point of having to be on two blood pressure medications. I started reading this book in June. At the time my bp was under control through medication, but I really wanted to see if I could get off of at least one. I incorporated information from The Menopause Diet Plan on foods to add for heart health, as well as how to safely lose weight while nourishing my body. I’ve included more calcium rich foods, more magnesium and potassium rich foods, plus increased my protein a bit. Not low carb, just more protein. I already had a healthy-ish eating pattern with plenty of beans, legumes, veggies and fruit, but tweaking things a bit has really helped in accordance with their recommendations! I’m now down over 9 pounds. Which, that’s great! But the best part is that I’ve been taken off one of my blood pressure medications, and if my blood pressure goes lower, I’ll be taken off the other! My bp at the doctors office today was 110/70. I have “white coat” syndrome, so this number is very impressive. My cholesterol is at a normal level now, and my good cholesterol has increased. To anyone seeing issues popping up during peri or postmenopause, I urge you to get this book. It’s a great resource and practical, sustainable plan of action.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2022I purchased this book with some very basic nutritional understanding. I learned so much of a deeper understanding of nutrients and how my body will respond during menopause. I have this book with numerous bookmarks and dogears within arms reach throughout the day. It is an absolute go-to for what to expect during peri- & menopause and what I can do to counteract the negative health changes.
This book is very easy to digest because it is written in a conversational style. It's like a friend talking to you. I never felt like it was written over my head. Plus, nothing suggested by the authors is to impossible to do. Healthy food choices, vitamins, and exercise. Plus, the authors have the knowledge, statistics, and personal life applications to support their wonderful advice.
I am happy to say that I am implementing the healthy suggestions into my lifestyle and will be recommending this book to all my girlfriends.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2023Menopause diet plan puts the can and hope into food choices to help women in this time of life have more hope, regain control and make proactive and impactful food choices that help them thrive and strive without feeling deprived. Enjoying the prime of life with recommendations based on evidence and sense is the message in a practical, applicable and implementable manner without unnecessary elimination and with do-able, attainable, maintainable and sustainable strategies.
Leslie Bonci,MPH,RDN,CSSD,LDN,FAND
- Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2020If you already know the basics of a healthy diet, there is no reason to purchase this book. If you come to it looking for, say, what you might eat or avoid to get a decent night’s sleep, you’re not going to find anything different from advice you would get from any other reputable source. The diet plan represents a healthy diet. Nothing specific to menopause. If you’re new to reading about nutrition or know nothing at all about menopause, this is probably a good beginning.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2020Let me just say, this books speaks my language.
Elizabeth and Hilary have created a Menopause handbook for you that recognizes all of the symptoms and emotions that women experience from peri-menopause through menopause. I was both surprised and encouraged by their point: "It’s quite possible that you will live up to half of your years after menopause, so why not try to be the best version of yourself right now and in the future?” I'd never thought of it that way, but truly, many women spend 30 or 40 years living - after menopause.
What I love about the book is that the authors repeatedly recognize that women experience menopause differently with a variety of symptoms, some less or more severe. The fact that every woman’s experience is unique is important. There’s something very freeing to read about other women’s experiences and the data that shows that many women have some of the same struggles, and…it’s all normal.
This book is filled with practical and reassuring tips (hello Mediterranean DASH diet) that will help you accept this time in your life, and will simply make life easier and happier. If you are a woman between the ages of 40 and 65, order a copy of this valuable resource!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2023Even though I am past menopause I found so many helpful hints to stay healthy as I continue to age with some health issues I'm managing. The recipes were also really simple and tasty, and it was written in a way that was easy to understand. Highly recommend!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2020Once I had read they recommend that most fat intake should be from vegetable - including corn, soy and canola - oils I paused. Have these ladies read any research on how harmful excessive omega-6 in your body can be? That they cause chronic inflammation? I am really hesitant whether I want to read the rest. One star, clearly. For dietitians, to be so behind on fundamental research?
- Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2021As a registered dietitian, and a woman going through menopause myself, I found this book to be incredibly helpful, and I really appreciate the sound nutrition advice for the readers. There’s so much out there that is not based on evidence and can create a lot of additional psychological and physical stress as women try to battle weight gain. Great resource to teach women how to work with the changes their bodies are going through, and highlight the importance of heart health, and maintaining muscle as we age. This is invaluable nutrition advice that any woman would benefit from. Thank you! Amy Huelle MPH, RD, CDCES
Top reviews from other countries
- Dani BinningtonReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 1, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book!!
I have thoroughly enjoyed reading this extremely well research book. I have always been a believer in eating a balanced diet but this book takes it an extra step forward and really explains why certain things are beneficial and why other things might be more of a myth. Now, I could understand that it might seem frustrating to some as there is no such a thing as a quick fix when it comes to weight loss in menopause. And I think that is why did book is such a true gem. It is down to the individual to make small and steady changes and over a period of time this will manifest in a healthy abundant life where I believe weight loss is a byproduct. I love the down-to-earth approach by these authors and between them they bring such a vast array of experience into the book that is just wonderful. This is definitely a practical guide. No-nonsense. No fat diets. Great expert advise! I’d highly recommend if you want to go a bit deeper into making changes for a healthy future.
- Gilly WReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 16, 2020
2.0 out of 5 stars Nothing new
Very disappointed with this book. Doesn’t really tell you anything you didn’t already know (eat healthily, exercise regularly and drink in moderation). The book is only centred on the US (lots of statistics about US women) and all the recipes are in cups with no conversion chart. Also no pictures of the recipes. I think most people could get what this book tells you for free on the internet.
- Lyne BenoitReviewed in Canada on July 15, 2021
3.0 out of 5 stars Not what I excepted
Fax I could’ve found somewhere else