UNMC College of Nursing nurse researcher in Scottsbluff receives national award for study on lack of education on benefits, risks of hormone replacement

Susan Wilhelm, Ph.D., assistant professor, UNMC College of Nursing West

Nebraska Division, recently received an award for a clinical research poster

and dissertation titled, Exploring the Relationship of Attitudes, Knowledge,

Support and Self-efficacy on Intent to Adhere to Hormonal Replacement Therapy

for Menopause.

She presented the poster at the annual Association of Womens Health,

Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses convention in Boston. The study, which she

concluded last year, has also recently been accepted for publication in

the Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, and Neonatal Nursing. Dr. Wilhelm,

also a clinical nurse specialist who has been involved in obstetric nursing

for about 25 years, was as surprised as many to learn in early July, the

National Institutes of Health prematurely halted a hormone replacement

therapy (HRT) study about three years early, citing health risks.

The NIHs National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute halted its Womens

Health Initiative study after it found an increased risk of invasive breast

cancer, increases in coronary heart disease, stroke, and pulmonary embolism

in study participants on estrogen plus progestin, compared to women taking

placebo pills. HRT is prescribed to treat symptoms of menopause, including

hot flashes, night sweats, sleeplessness, and vaginal dryness, as well

as to prevent some long-term conditions more common in women after menopause.

The NIH study found a 41 percent increase in strokes, 29 percent increase

in heart attacks, doubling of rates of blood clots, 22 percent increase

in total cardiovascular disease, 26 percent increase in breast cancer,

37 percent reduction in cases of colorectal cancer, one-third reduction

in hip fracture rates, and 24 percent reduction in total fractures. Although

benefits included fewer cases of hip fractures and colon cancer, the NIH

said the harm was greater than the benefit

While Dr. Wilhelms award stands on its own merit, the recent news most

likely will affect follow-up in her study. Dr. Wilhelms study looked at

the factors affecting a womans decision of whether to take hormone replacement

therapy. Not surprising, she found one of the biggest determinants was

safety. She also found a majority of women were worried about breast cancer

but not about heart disease.

What is worrisome about the findings of the Womens Health Initiative

is the lack of support for HRT as a primary cardiovascular disease prevention

therapy because for years, we (health professionals) thought HRT prevented

heart disease, Dr. Wilhelm said. The findings seem to reinforce what

women are already afraid of. It also shows we should be more concerned

about heart disease than breast cancer as far as occurrences.

She studied 167 peri-menopausal and menopausal rural women, 39 to 58

years old, who were considering whether to go on HRT. One of the goals

was to assist women in the decision making process. The majority of study

participants were not yet experiencing menopausal symptoms that interfered

with their daily activities and did not have a history of chronic illnesses,

uterine problems, or a history of osteoporosis.

The purpose of Dr. Wilhelms study was to explore the relationship between

attitudes toward menopause, knowledge of menopause, perception of support

from relatives, friends and health providers in taking HRT, and self-efficacy

for HRT.

Women were asked to respond, on a scale from one to seven, with seven

being very likely, whether they would take HRT. Most answered five, that

they were slightly likely to take HRT.

She found one of the most significant factors in whether to take HRT

or not is access to information in order to make an informed decision.

She said women consistently report a lack of access to what they believe

are valid and reliable sources of knowledge concerning the menopause experience.

When Dr. Wilhelm rated the study participants on their knowledge of

menopause issues, they scored 72 percent, with knowledge especially lacking

on the benefits and risks of HRT and physiology (signs and symptoms).

Dr. Wilhelm knows firsthand the struggle of finding the right information.

When I turned 40, I became menopausal, Dr. Wilhelm said. When I tried

to find valid information about menopause, I had a very difficult time.

I thought if I had a difficult time as an ob nurse, I know others would

too. Some of my friends were having menopause symptoms too.

Other studies report that although benefits of HRT are known, the majority

of women do not take it. Dr. Wilhelm said this also may be due to how women

view menopause.

She said women with a more positive attitude towards menopause may not

perceive the need to adopt HRT. She cited one study which found attitude

was related inversely to HRT use.

Women have been leery about taking hormones. For one thing, if we are

going to promote HRT, we need to help women feel more confident in taking

it and provide them with the knowledge and a benefits versus the risk ratio.

Her study also found women are significantly more likely to take HRT

if they feel their relatives, friends and health care providers support

their taking HRT.

Dr. Wilhelm said the makeup of the study participants may have been

a factor in the level of intent to seek HRT.

Rural individuals tend to take medications and seek treatment for health

problems only if they cannot perform their activities of daily living,

she said. There also seems to be a difference in managing menopause between

women who view menopause as a medical condition that needs to be treated

and those women who view menopause as a natural transition.

Whatever the final outcome of the NIH study, Dr. Wilhelm hopes the recent

news will prompt health professionals to more thoroughly educate women

about the risks and benefits of HRT in the future. The issue has a large

impact, she said, considering it is estimated by the year 2015, half of

all women in the United States will be menopausal.

You have to look at your own risk factors and look at the quality of

life issues now and weigh the benefits and risks for you personally, she

said.