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October 18, 2004 New study reports post-polio women experience menopause differently than non-disabled peers Nationwide study explored the experience of menopause for 500,000 women in the U.S. with a history of polio |
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St. Louis , Miss. – Women with late effects of polio experience menopause differently than their non-disabled peers – physiologically, physically and psychologically – according to a new study funded by Post-Polio Health International.
In their final report "Women with Polio: Menopause, Late Effects, Life Satisfaction and Emotional Distress," the researchers present significant findings:
"This study provides the first solid evidence that post-polio women experience menopause differently," said Joan L. Headley, Post-Polio Health International executive director. "Post-polio women should educate themselves and their health care providers about the differences in their experiences. While there is much more to be learned about menopause in the context of disability, this study is an important first step toward future generations of menopause studies that no longer ignore women with disabilities." Researchers Claire Z. Kalpakjian, Ph.D., principal investigator and project director, and Denise G. Tate, Ph.D., co-principal investigator, both from the University's Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, and Elisabeth H. Quint, M.D., co-investigator, from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, studied almost 1,000 post-polio women, aged 34 to 99 from 49 states during 2003. "Of the 30 million women with physical disabilities in the United States, more than 16 million are over the age of 50, constituting a large and growing population of women who have been relatively understudied with regards to the psychological and physical experience of menopause," said Kalpakjian. "Women with disabilities in general have long been neglected in rehabilitation research. As such, little is known about the unique biological milestones women experience as they age and the interaction of physical disability and these biological changes." The complete report is available on Post-Polio Health International's Web site, www.post-polio.org (click on Research). Post-Polio Health International actively promotes education, research, advocacy and networking among the post-polio community to enhance the lives and independence of polio survivors and home ventilator users. Its Research Fund was established in 1995 to seek scientific information leading to eventual amelioration of the consequences of poliomyelitis and/or neuromuscular respiratory diseases. NOTE : The first public presentation of study results will be held from 2 – 4 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 24, in the Henderson Room, 3rd floor Michigan League, 911 N. University, Ann Arbor. Title: "An Exchange on the Change: Findings from the Major U.S. Study on Menopause in Post-Polio Women" Presenter: Claire Kalpakjian, Ph.D. (Physical Medicine) with Elisabeth Quint, M.D. (OB/GYN) To attend, call 734-763-9374 or e-mail um-polio-research@med.umich.edu by Friday, Oct. 22.
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