
The anti-ageing benefits of HRT, from collagen production to better brain and heart health
'I was in New Mexico on holiday and caught this on the news,' says Jamieson, a Hong Kong-based specialist in integrative and functional medicine.
'I was so horrified that I might be endangering my patients' health. I sent all those on hormones an email asking them to stop it.'
The study, published more than 20 years ago , was hugely damning of HRT, suggesting it caused a 26 per cent increased risk of breast cancer, a 29 per cent increased risk of heart disease and a 41 per cent increased risk of stroke.
Many doctors stopped prescribing it,
women's fears soared , and the US Food and Drug Administration added prominent warnings to hormone therapy products to highlight the increased risks of cardiovascular events such as heart attack, stroke and blood clots, as well as breast cancer.
Sue Jamieson was among the first doctors in Hong Kong to prescribe HRT. Photo: Dr Sue Jamieson
The study was found to be flawed. Based on research since, and the development of bioidentical hormones – which are chemically the same as natural hormones and safer than the older synthetic oestradiol (E2), which Jamieson describes as an 'aggressive' form of oestrogen – attitudes towards HRT have evolved.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
20 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
AniTech offers AI kit to tackle depression and suicides in Hong Kong
AniTech, the developer of an artificial intelligence (AI) platform to detect early signs of depression, plans to launch its technology next year to tackle mental illness and suicide among the city's population, co-founder and CEO Candy Lau Po-chun said. The company operates an electroencephalogram (EEG) brain electrical signal-based screening platform, which can be used to help prevent cases among youth and elderly people – two vulnerable groups in the city known for their high levels of pressure and stress in life, it said. 'While Hong Kong legislators have made efforts to support those with mental illnesses and address related suicides, these are insufficient to find hidden patients such as those with mild symptoms,' Lau said in an interview. 'We aim to build on this progress by providing a tool for early screening and prevention.' Hong Kong recorded 1,138 suicides last year, the highest number since 2003, the Samaritan Befrienders said, based on data from the Coroner's Court. Cases rose 4 per cent from 2023. Suicides among students almost tripled to 32 cases over a 10-year period to 2023, according to government data. A Chinese University of Hong Kong survey in 2023 showed a quarter of polled students had mental disorders, while 6.9 per cent had suicidal tendencies. 02:05 Long Covid-19 patients struggle with suicide risk more than 2 years into the pandemic Long Covid-19 patients struggle with suicide risk more than 2 years into the pandemic Co-founder and non-executive director Eddie Ma Chi-him, a professor in neuroscience at City University of Hong Kong, built the AniTech platform using decades of research on EEG signals.


South China Morning Post
a day ago
- South China Morning Post
US begins organ-transplant reform as ‘signs of life' found before some retrievals
The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has launched a reform of the organ-transplant system and threatened to close a major procurement body after a probe found premature attempts to start organ retrieval while patients showed signs of life. The investigation conducted by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), a division of HHS, examined 351 cases where organ donation was authorised but not completed. It found 73 patients had shown neurological signs incompatible with organ donation and at least 28 patients may not have been deceased at the time organ procurement was initiated, the HHS said in a statement on Monday. The probe also found evidence of poor neurologic assessments, questionable consent practices, and misclassification of causes of death in several cases, the agency said.


South China Morning Post
2 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Ex-Hong Kong athlete swims 360km around Swedish island as part of mental health fight
A former Hong Kong athlete, who said the city was where he 'fell in love with open-water swimming', has swum 360 kilometres around a Swedish island as part of his battle with mental health and to raise awareness of the issue and for nature conservation. Karl Palmqvist, a Swedish national who trained with the Hong Kong Sports Institute's triathlon national development squad as a teenager, completed the 21-day swim around Gotland, Sweden's largest island, on Thursday. But the mammoth achievement comes two years after he was at his 'absolute lowest' following years of injuries, an identity crisis and the constant pressure to perform. 'The way sports are nowadays, you push kids so early on that it's almost the only thing that they're banking on, or in my case, such a big part of my identity,' Palmqvist said. 'And then, when you've almost gone professional or been elite within your sport, and then it's taken away from you due to injuries or mental burnout, we're just left there floating on our own without any tools to be able to work through it. Karl Palmqvist checked himself into a psychiatric ward but has since pulled through. Photo: Anders Klapp Palmqvist moved to Shanghai when he was three years old and relocated to Hong Kong aged 10. He lived in the city for five years before returning to Sweden.