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Science & HealthTuesday, June 30, 2026

Italy launches national campaign to reframe menopause as a third of a woman’s life

A parliamentary presentation in Rome marks the start of a cross-specialty push to combat stereotypes and improve preventive care, as UAE hospitals simultaneously roll out integrated women’s health models.

A national campaign titled ‘Menopausa, riscriviamo le regole’ (Menopause, let’s rewrite the rules) was presented at Italy’s Chamber of Deputies, backed by a forthcoming book, a dedicated web portal and a national conference. The initiative, led by endocrinologist Annamaria Colao, vice-president of the Higher Health Council, frames menopause and post-menopause as a phase that can now span a third of a woman’s life—from age 50 to beyond 80—and argues that the hormonal shift remains dangerously under-discussed in both public discourse and clinical practice.

Viewed from Rome, the campaign targets a persistent information gap. Colao notes that the decline in oestrogen and progesterone elevates cardiovascular risk to levels comparable with or exceeding those of men, while oncologists at the same event highlighted that post-50 cancer incidence—breast, colorectal, lung—rises for neoplasms with known modifiable risk factors. Yet screening adherence lags, and symptoms such as hot flushes, sleep disruption and mood disorders are frequently normalised rather than managed. The campaign’s central argument is that menopause is not a terminus of vitality but a transition requiring the same structured, multidisciplinary attention already being built into other life stages.

That logic is being operationalised in the United Arab Emirates, where several hospital groups have launched integrated service lines designed to follow women from adolescence through menopause. Burjeel Medical City’s Genesis Service Line links fertility, maternal-fetal medicine, genetics and neonatal care; Medcare’s Elle programme coordinates obstetrics and gynaecology with endocrinology, dermatology and mental health; Aster’s Care for Her initiative runs dedicated clinics for adolescence, reproductive years and menopause; and HealthHub’s community-based network explicitly targets underdiagnosed conditions such as endometriosis, PCOS and stress-related hormonal disruption. Specialists across these networks report that women frequently present after years of dismissing pain, irregular cycles or anxiety as normal, a pattern that mirrors the Italian campaign’s concern about cultural silence.

Alongside structural care models, the sources point to the role of modifiable daily factors. Indonesian outlets report that meditation is supported by research as an effective tool for anxiety disorders, while travel-related disruptions—time-zone shifts, skipped meals, dehydration, sleep loss—can destabilise blood glucose and amplify cortisol. A Persian report warns that recurrent hypoglycaemia can blunt the body’s warning signals, raising the risk of severe episodes. The Italian campaign’s next concrete milestone is the national conference, where specialists will begin translating the rewritten rules into clinical and educational practice.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

29%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Southeast Asian pressArab Gulf press
Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Women's health is framed as a continuous journey from anxiety to menopause, emphasizing prevention and lifestyle. Articles on meditation and nutrition highlight accessible interventions and food policies for long-term well-being. The tone is informative and practical, without alarm.

Arab Gulf press
TriumphPragmatism

Women's health is viewed through the lens of medical innovation, with laparoscopic surgery presented as an advanced solution for gynecological issues. Emphasis is on technological benefits: less invasiveness, faster recovery, and safety. The tone is promotional and confident in technical progress.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 05:44 PM1 language · 2 outlets
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2 outlets|1 language|2 min read
Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Italy launches national campaign to reframe menopause as a third of a woman’s life

A parliamentary presentation in Rome marks the start of a cross-specialty push to combat stereotypes and improve preventive care, as UAE hospitals simultaneously roll out integrated women’s health models.

A national campaign titled ‘Menopausa, riscriviamo le regole’ (Menopause, let’s rewrite the rules) was presented at Italy’s Chamber of Deputies, backed by a forthcoming book, a dedicated web portal and a national conference. The initiative, led by endocrinologist Annamaria Colao, vice-president of the Higher Health Council, frames menopause and post-menopause as a phase that can now span a third of a woman’s life—from age 50 to beyond 80—and argues that the hormonal shift remains dangerously under-discussed in both public discourse and clinical practice.

Viewed from Rome, the campaign targets a persistent information gap. Colao notes that the decline in oestrogen and progesterone elevates cardiovascular risk to levels comparable with or exceeding those of men, while oncologists at the same event highlighted that post-50 cancer incidence—breast, colorectal, lung—rises for neoplasms with known modifiable risk factors. Yet screening adherence lags, and symptoms such as hot flushes, sleep disruption and mood disorders are frequently normalised rather than managed. The campaign’s central argument is that menopause is not a terminus of vitality but a transition requiring the same structured, multidisciplinary attention already being built into other life stages.

That logic is being operationalised in the United Arab Emirates, where several hospital groups have launched integrated service lines designed to follow women from adolescence through menopause. Burjeel Medical City’s Genesis Service Line links fertility, maternal-fetal medicine, genetics and neonatal care; Medcare’s Elle programme coordinates obstetrics and gynaecology with endocrinology, dermatology and mental health; Aster’s Care for Her initiative runs dedicated clinics for adolescence, reproductive years and menopause; and HealthHub’s community-based network explicitly targets underdiagnosed conditions such as endometriosis, PCOS and stress-related hormonal disruption. Specialists across these networks report that women frequently present after years of dismissing pain, irregular cycles or anxiety as normal, a pattern that mirrors the Italian campaign’s concern about cultural silence.

Alongside structural care models, the sources point to the role of modifiable daily factors. Indonesian outlets report that meditation is supported by research as an effective tool for anxiety disorders, while travel-related disruptions—time-zone shifts, skipped meals, dehydration, sleep loss—can destabilise blood glucose and amplify cortisol. A Persian report warns that recurrent hypoglycaemia can blunt the body’s warning signals, raising the risk of severe episodes. The Italian campaign’s next concrete milestone is the national conference, where specialists will begin translating the rewritten rules into clinical and educational practice.

Source divergence

Science & Health · 2 outlets · 1 language

29%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable80%
Neutral20%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 1 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Southeast Asian pressArab Gulf press
Southeast Asian press
PragmatismDetachment

Women's health is framed as a continuous journey from anxiety to menopause, emphasizing prevention and lifestyle. Articles on meditation and nutrition highlight accessible interventions and food policies for long-term well-being. The tone is informative and practical, without alarm.

Arab Gulf press
TriumphPragmatism

Women's health is viewed through the lens of medical innovation, with laparoscopic surgery presented as an advanced solution for gynecological issues. Emphasis is on technological benefits: less invasiveness, faster recovery, and safety. The tone is promotional and confident in technical progress.

This story appeared in

2 outlets · 1 language

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