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Sybil Crawford receives 2020 Best Paper Award from North American Menopause Society

UMass Medical School women鈥檚 health researcher Sybil Crawford, PhD, has received the 2020 North American Menopause Society/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Menopause Journal Best Paper Award. Dr. Crawford, professor of medicine, is lead author of the , published in the June 2019 issue of Menopause, which found that many women who are experiencing menopausal symptoms could benefit from hormone therapy with minimal health risks.

Crawford and co-authors revisited the recommendations made in 2002 by the historic Women鈥檚 Health Initiative (WHI) in light of subsequent research that has led to updated guidelines.

Use of hormone therapy plummeted nearly 20 years ago, when the WHI found that such therapy could increase the risk of heart disease and breast cancer. But subsequent research involving women who are younger and earlier in the menopausal transition show they have less risk than the older women initially studied, and recent WHI findings indicate no difference in deaths from all causes between women who did and did not use hormone therapy.

鈥淭he pendulum is starting to swing back a bit,鈥 said Crawford. 鈥淭he emphasis is on tailoring treatment to an individual woman鈥檚 needs and health conditions as recommended by various clinical groups, including the North American Menopause Society.鈥

Crawford is a co-investigator for the Study of Women鈥檚 Health Across the Nation (SWAN), which funded the research. SWAN examines the physical, biological, psychological and social changes women experience during their transitional middle years to understand how those affect health and quality of life during aging.

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