of rodents, females who have had their ovaries, their biggest source of estradiol, surgically removed do better on certain maze tests than females with ordinary stores of estrogen.
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Hormone therapy has much to recommend it, but then we are pulled back to the reality of the heightened risk of breast cancer that years decades of estrogen supplementation can bring. We may wonder, should we be on hormone therapy for our entire postmenopausal life, or should we be more circumspect in our use of it? We're waffling again, we women. Not just in this country, with its "inflammatory" press, but everywhere. Complain though American doctors will about the low compliance rate of their postmenopausal patients, American women lead the world in the use of hormone therapy, just as they do in the rate of hysterectomies. In the United States, 46 percent of postmenopausal women take or have taken hormone therapy. British, Australian, and Scandinavian women come next, with ever-used rates of around 30 percent. Continental Europeans are notably less enthusiastic about medication, the figures falling into the teens, while in Japan a mere 6 percent of postmenopausal women take hormone replacement therapy perhaps because they import enough estrogen into their bodies through the foods they eat, notably that sink of phytoestrogens, soy.
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In reporting on the relative rate of hormone use among their nation's womanpool, researchers wring their hands and ask, Why, why aren't we better missionaries than we are? The researchers look for defining characteristics of the hormone faithful. In America, hormone use is positively correlated with educational level: the more formal schooling a woman has received, the likelier she is to be a hormone enthusiast and to agree with the statement "the benefits outweigh the risks." But in the Netherlands, a country of bright, bookish women, educational level has no impact on hormone use, while in Norway, the more educated the woman is, the more likely she is to reject hormone therapy. The researchers of the various studies conclude by offering suggestions on ways to improve patient compliance, the most common being that doctors must learn to preach early and often. From a study in Rehovot, Israel: "We believe gynecologists should devote more effort to public education, in that those women who had discussed HRT with their physician were more likely to use it." From Copenhagen: "It is suggested that lack of knowledge of HRT may sometimes be the cause of
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