Dr. Jennifer Ashton

Dr. Jennifer Ashton: Episode Link

Dr. Jennifer Ashton IG

Cooler Moments Platform

TRANSCRIPT:

Colleen: Welcome back to Hot Flashes and Cool Topics. Today, you guys, I’m pinching myself

because Dr. Jennifer Ashton is on the show. Welcome 

Dr. Ashton: Thank you, Colleen. Thanks so much for having me.

Colleen: You have been such a wonderful representation of this time of life and anyone

who is not following you on Instagram needs to right now. I wanted to start with

the experiment that you have been doing the last six months for health and wellness.

I have watched you. It’s just watching you do the push -ups. I’m like, “Oh my gosh,

I could not do that.” But how did that get started and why did you decide to do

it?

Dr. Ashton:  First of all, I challenge or will push back on that. You don’t know that you

can’t do that. I thought I couldn’t do it either, but it was something that started

just as something I wanted to do for myself. I had just stepped away from a 14

year position at ABC News where I was waking up every single morning at four or

five o ‘clock in the morning to go to work. And I thought, okay, I’m gonna have a

little bit of a different schedule, which I was excited about. Let’s see.

I wanted to do this experiment and I deliberately, in my mind,

to myself called it an experiment where I would try over a six month period of

time to get into the best health wellness fitness that I could achieve out of a

sense of curiosity. I’m 55. I knew I wasn’t in my best fitness level.

And it’s not like I was doing nothing, but I just felt my back always hurt.

If I was at a party, I’m not joking. This is embarrassing to admit. But if I was

at a party where I would be dancing with my husband or one of my kids or a

friend, I would literally be out of breath in one song. So I had lost my party

fitness. I wanted to look 55 years of age in menopause.

Skin starts to sag. Skin sagging is one thing. Muscle sagging is something else.

And so I said, okay, I’m going to try this six month experiment. I announced it on

my Instagram, thank you by the way for following it. And there were

over a million views and people became really interested, supportive,

inspired, obsessed with it. And I’ve been kind of updating people along the way.

And I have learned so much. I partnered with an incredible trainer, Corey Rowe.

And we are bringing a lot of this information to our followers in a way that

literally I have women in their seventies who are DMing me on Instagram saying I

want to start to do this. How do I do it? So we’re putting it all all out for

people in the next couple of months, but people can follow it along on my Instagram

and and in my newsletter, by the way, which is free. Ajenda. – Ajenda, yes, Ajenda.

Colleen: Love that. 

Dr. Ashton:  But it was really all about curiosity.

And I think there’s so much information and misinformation out there that I call it

noise. There’s just a lot of noise in the wellness space. And it’s nice to see

you know, kind of says like, “All right, look, I couldn’t do this before, but now

I can. This is what’s possible.” And that sense of community and the information

that I’ve been sharing with people, you know, really is resonating. So it’s been

fun. It’s been rewarding. It’s been funny.

Colleen: And it’s really been incredible. And of course, you picked your sixth month to be

the holidays, the hardest month of the year. (laughs) – Like why?

Dr. Ashton: – I know. I didn’t think about it.

Colleen: – I know. – Going through this six month journey, so many women, we’ve been doing this podcast five years. We have talked to so many experts, but women are just not

getting out there and advocating for their own health and wellness. And I think you

doing so and being a great representation is really going to help a lot of women.

Why do you think it is still so hard for us to be our own best medical advocates?

Dr. Ashton: That’s the big question. That’s the million -dollar question. I don’t have an answer for it. I can only tell you, again, and a full disclosure embarrassing

admission, that I’ve even been guilty of that

Right? It’s true. Right. You know, if you have a doctor who’s double board certified

and that can happen to me, it can happen to anyone. And I think, you know,

part of it is societal, part of it is psychological, part of it is cultural, part

of it is generational. Who knows? There’s a zillion reasons for it. All I know is

that, you know, I’ve been in practice almost 20 years. I’ve spoken to millions of

women in my role as former chief medical correspondent at ABC News and other

networks before then. I’ve had thousands of patients and we are just generally

conditioned to not prioritize our own health,

to even question things that and feeling or experiencing.

And then everything can kind of domino effect suffer from that point on.

And look, I was guilty of this, Colleen. I literally, by the way,

I’ve never, what I’m about to say, I’ve never said before publicly, so I’m giving

you a nugget.

When I went through menopause, which was in the last five years. I literally had

every symptom head to toe that you have read about,

heard about, learned about, or whatever. And I did not recognize that they were

symptoms of perimenopause and menopause. Oh no. Like a year ago.

And I’m a board certified OB /GYN. So, I think that goes back to your original

question, you know, this is just something that what do we say, oh, you know, well,

I’m 50, so my back hurts, or I’m 50, so my hair is breaking off, or I’m 50,

so I’m having a hot flash, or we say, I’m too busy, I don’t have time to deal

with this, and I don’t want to talk about it because there’s been this ridiculous

stigma where it’s been like whispered about for generations. And,

you know, if it can happen to me, it can happen to anyone. I mean, it’s just,

it’s gotta change. And thank goodness, menopause is having a moment.

Colleen: – Oh yes, oh yes, menopause is having a big moment. And when we started this just in 2019, nobody was talking about menopause. And it was like, oh, but there were so many advocates and experts that wanted to get the word out. And it was great to see

this trajectory just kind of explode. But with that comes a lot of misinformation.

You know, a lot of people are saying, take this, take that. How can women judge?

This is why I love your joining with Astellas to talk about VEOZAH. Because not every

woman can take an HRT, but they’re still getting hot flashes. Can you talk a little

bit about your relationship with them?

Dr. Ashton:- Yeah, so First of all, I have to start

with a personal, another personal kind of inspiration or motivation. And it was why

I was so excited and felt so compelled to partner with Astellas to talk about VEOZAH.

I have a 25 -year -old daughter who’s obviously not a menopause, but has been told

by her gynecologist, her doctors, that hormones of any kind are never an option for

her because of a medical reason. I immediately thought, as I was,

she’s 25, I’m 55, as I started to go into menopause, I thought,

what’s my daughter gonna do 30 years from now when she’s in menopause?

What are the options that she’s going to have presented to her? And from there,

it was literally the next-door neighbor response to realize, and again,

from what I do as a medical communicator, as a doctor, as a friend, as a woman

myself, no one, people think that here’s your options,

hormones or suffer, that’s it. And even some healthcare professionals think that,

but Certainly, a lot of women in the lay public, that is what they’ve been told and

they don’t know about other options. And so I felt personally compelled as the

mother of someone for whom any kind of hormones will never be an option to say,

look, we have to, we always have to go back to the premise, the classic proper way

of medical management and treatment, which is to present all options, risks,

benefits, and alternatives. And when you talk about suffering from moderate to severe

VMS, vasomotor symptoms, hot flashes and night sweats, whatever you want to use to

refer to them, there are hormonal options. There are non -hormonal options that are

by prescription. There’s other cognitive behavioral therapy has been studied, but women

are usually given one option and that’s it. And I just felt so strongly,

you know, Astellas is doing such a good job with I’m sure you’ve seen or heard

about the new platform, mycoolermoments.com. It’s kind of just a great education

discussion community platform that women can get informed, figure out what to bring

to their healthcare provider to discuss if VEOZAH or any other management option is

right for them. And that is at the beginning and end of the day, what I feel so

strongly about as a doctor and as a woman.

Colleen:  – Can you talk a little bit about the

updates they’ve made with regards to the liver testing for women? Because I know

there’s a concern for some patients.

Dr. Ashton:  – Yeah, So first of all, big picture, the macro

view, anytime you take anything, whether it’s over the counter, prescription,

supplement, even you could go so far as to think test, treatment, anything in

medicine, you always have to ask what are the risks, what are the benefits, right?

And it’s not just what are the risks of the treatment or the medication. It’s what

are the risks of the medication or the treatment and what are the risks of not

taking the medication? And then you go ask the same question with benefits. What are

the benefits of the medication? What are the benefits of not taking the medication?

So there’s really four questions that people should ask. Always, everything has a

risk as we know over the counter supplements, prescription, medication.

With clinical studies, it has been detected that there could be a change in liver

blood tests in women who are taking VEOZAH. So the FDA, after getting one report of

a patient who had an elevation of her liver blood test, which gradually went back

to normal after she discontinued VEOZAH, added that alert in terms of a recommendation

guideline for prescribers. So any woman who would be starting VEOZAH would have her

liver blood test checked before treatment, every month for the first three months of

treatment, and then at six and nine months. And every woman is counseled about what

the signs of possible liver issues could be. And this should go on,

and I wanna be crystal clear, with any prescription that you are ever given for any

reason. You should always ask, What are the risks? How would I know if I have a

side effect? How common is that side effect? What do I do if I have it? I mean,

this is just basic medical practice 101. So as there are with many other

medications, you know, that’s something, if a woman has preexisting cirrhosis or liver

problems or kidney problems or takes a medication called a SIP -1A2 inhibitor,

they should not take the VOAZAH. But this is why medicine is not cookie cutter,

robotic. This is why a woman should talk to her healthcare provider or doctor, pros,

cons, risks, benefits, and find out if this or any other option is right for her.

Colleen: – That’s so important to know and to write down because we always say to women, have your notes. You get 15 minutes maybe with your doctor. And it’s so important

that you know your family history, you know your medical history, a lot of women

can’t answer the questions of do you have cancer in your family, do you have

anything like that? What would you say are some of the most important questions

women can ask when they walk into their doctor’s office about menopause?

Dr. Ashton: – Well, the first question, yeah, the first question, and I think this isn’t

necessarily a question, but it’s an awareness that I think every person should know,

including men, because most men have at least one woman they care about in their

life on some level, is that symptoms of menopause can start in a woman’s mid -30s,

as you know. (laughing) – Lucky us. – And so it’s not,

oh, you have to be 50 or you have to be 60 or you have to be 55. There’s no

line in the sand where a woman is quote unquote too young for it. And so that

woman needs to know before she walks into her doctor or health care provider’s

office that she knows her body best. And so anything that you notice that deviates

from the norm, you should be kind of like your medical detective or your medical

reporter or journalist and say as much as you can about that observation, that

symptom or that sign, as you can. When did it start? How bad is it? How often do

you notice it? What makes it better? What makes it worse? How much of a problem is

it in your life? I would recommend that women don’t follow what I did,

which is minimize, ignore, deny. Say, no, no, no, as it is 2024, almost 2025,

we should not be doing that. And so I think it starts with just recognizing that

you are the expert in your own body. So when you go into your doctor’s office, and

it doesn’t have to be for your annual exam, yes, you can make an appointment and

say, I would like to come in and talk about things that I’m experiencing that I

think may be related to perimenopause or menopause, and then find out what are my

treatment options. I used to refer to this like a menu of options, literally like

you can choose one thing from column A or one thing from column A.

Colleen: Like a Chinese menu.

Dr. Ashton: Yeah, literally. And so, you know, I think women should ask their provider,

and this is where the patient -doctor relationship really should be a two -way street,

right? It’s not a dictatorship, it definitely should not be that.

So in some cases, the patient could actually be bringing information to the provider

or doctor that he or she might not have heard before. Veozah is a perfect example

of that. So if you say to your doctor, “I heard there’s a 100 % hormone -free

option for it to severe hot flashes and night sweats and your doctor says, “I

haven’t heard of that.” That good doctor, that doesn’t mean, “Oh my god, find a new

doctor.” That good doctor should then educate herself or himself and say,

“I haven’t looked into that yet, but guess what? I’m going to, and I’m going to

get back to you.” And then you can move on and figure out whether that’s an option

for you. I think always having that dialogue is so important.

And when you hear a doctor say, “I don’t know,” it doesn’t mean you have a bad

doctor. In my opinion, it actually means you have a good doctor. And they’re open

and honest and willing to learn. And, you know, we learn every single day in

medicine and science, or at least we should.

Colleen: And there really has been, we have found that a lot of doctors just simply are not educated on menopause and the support system. It’s so new, the conversation, but yet in medical school they weren’t given the hours that they needed to really educate themselves.

Dr. Ashton: Correct. Which is when you think about it, there are three hormonal stages in a woman’s life that most women will go through, not all. Puberty, every woman goes through. Pregnancy, most women go through, not all. Menopause, my own husband, I’ll tell you the two comments from men in my family that I had spoken to me literally in the last three

months. My husband said to me, “Does every woman go through menopause?” And I said,

“By the way, he’s a Harvard graduate.” So this has nothing to do with the education

level.

Colleen: – Right, exactly. He’s and he doesn’t go through it.

Dr. Ashton:- I said, only the ones who are alive, honey. Only the ones who are alive. So I mean, I go at things most of the time with a sense of humor because we have to laugh

it through life, but I do all kidding aside, consider menopause to be a privilege

reserved only for the living, right? A hundred years ago, when women didn’t live to

50, Maybe you didn’t have to talk so much about menopause, but today it could

literally be the halfway point in our lives, right? So I said only the ones who

were alive. And so I taught my husband something. And then my son, who’s a Columbia

graduate and has grown up in a medical family with a mother who’s a gynecologist

said to me, and I quote, “Mom, do you have menopause?” And I said,

cutie, it’s not a disease, by the way. It is not a disease. And yes, I’m 55.

So yes, I am in menopause and my son’s 26. So I felt good about that because I

educated two men at very different ages about something that should be so commonly

known that, you know, we have to make up for all the, the lost ground in lack of

education and awareness. And I really think that platforms like My Cooler Moments do

that because there’s so much information there.

Colleen: Can we talk about the platform? So what can women expect to see when they go on My Cooler Moments?

Dr. Ashton: Well, first of all, a real conversation with a real woman who’s gone through menopause, who talks about her experience with moderate to severe hot flashes and night sweats, you know, through her career, through her life as a mom, for her, VEOZAH was the

answer for her, but she really talked about the whole process of what she went

through with her doctor and how the menopause experience and symptoms affected her.

There’s a lot of information about menopause, hot flashes and night sweats in

general. There’s great information there about how women of different racial and

ethnic groups experience hot flashes and night sweats differently, which a lot of

people don’t know. There’s a quiz on there, ’cause you know I love a quiz. It

brings me right back to school. There’s some tips about how women can talk about

menopause with their doctor or healthcare provider. There’s savings cost information

specifically about VEOZAH, if they choose that as an option in terms of managing their

symptoms of menopause, in terms of hot flashes and night sweats. It’s just, it’s a

great resource for education, community, just so that women have a place that they

can go to really feel heard and empowered, which I think is great. – And I think

that’s important too. We’ll have the link in the show notes for Astellas and for

cooler moments. But just talking about the cost, because some women are concerned

about the cost and it may not be covered by insurance. So the fact that they’re

offering some support that might make it more cost effective is a great resource for

women to have because they wouldn’t even know that. That’s number one. Number two, I

mean, as I’m where every listener of yours has heard from their own provider,

reimbursement coverage differs literally person to person based on their insurance

information. And some tests, some treatments,

this is why most doctors find it so kind of challenging and time consuming to deal

with a lot of different insurance companies is Some require prior authorization, so

someone will have to say, “Well, I tried this on a patient and it didn’t work, so

that’s why we’re trying this.” That’s not the case only for managing hot flashes and

night sweats. That can be the case for a lot of other tests, treatments, whatever.

But they have a whole kind of access information there about cost and prior

authorization, all the insurance information it can be very kind of intimidating for

people.

Colleen: – Exactly, and a lot of women don’t know where to start. So that’s a great

starting point because they’re like, “Where can I even get the information on this?”

So again, we’ll have that in the show notes. And another great platform for

information is Ajenda, which you have started. Now you were, you know, with Good

Morning America and NBC is for a long time, did this have, were they related, the

decision to leave and to start Ajenda?

Dr. Ashton: – No, well, related slightly, number one in terms of timing, but for me, I think you mentioned that you started your podcast before the pandemic. For me, a lot of the decision to focus 100 % of my bandwidth on women’s health and weight and nutrition, which is what I’m board certified in, I kind of see as an unexpected consequence of the pandemic as well,

because Colleen, I learned more about COVID than most infectious disease doctors,

because I had to talk about it 16 hours a day. And I was speaking to people at

the NIH and the CDC and the FDA and, you know,

non -stop. nonstop. And what I realized is, and I was very honest with my amazing

bosses at the network about this, “Can I talk about any topic in health?” Sure.

In fact, that was my job. And I loved that for 14, 16, 18 years at a combination

of networks because it kept me current in medical headlines that the average doctor

unfortunately doesn’t have time to stay current in because they’re too busy with

constant patient care and all of the things, the busy work that goes along with

that. It was my job to be current with medical headlines. But after covering COVID,

I said, listen, we’re good now, we’re out of it. Now, you know,

I really just want to focus on OB /GYN, obesity, medicine, and nutrition issues,

and the way I decided to do that was by launching this free weekly newsletter

called Ajenda– Join Ajenda. And when I had almost 200 ,000 subscribers who were

saying to me, I look forward to this every Wednesday. It’s such good information. It

was so, you know, just kind of reinforced to me that there is a need, there is an

interest. Women are particularly passionate about not just reading something,

but understanding the different perspectives that go along with it. And I think

that’s what we do really, well.

Colleen: So it’s continuing to grow and I’ve I just

have been loving it. And we have been loving it too. It’s got so many resources

and so much information because it talks about women’s health, not just menopause,

but not just obesity, but women’s health. And along the lines of women’s health when

it comes to weight, there’s so much being said about will go the an Ozempic. But

what about women’s muscle mass? Is that a concern when they’re taking these

medications that they might be losing? Because we lose muscle as we get older to

begin with. How concerns do they be about that?

Dr. Ashton: Well, first of all, every woman and

every man should be concerned about losing muscle mass, which actually starts,

get ready, drum roll at really around the age of 40. Okay, – Oh,

yeah, low loss of muscle mass as men and women age.

Part of that has to do with declining testosterone levels, but it’s not that simple.

So age -related sarcopenia, which is the medical term for losing muscle mass, is a

real issue for everyone. And it’s one of the one areas,

the other one being bone health and bone density and osteoporosis, where being skinny

or thin, or I don’t care what word you want to use, is actually not good for you,

right? Because you want to put some of that positive gravitational force on your

muscles, on your bones, just by being vertical and walking on the planet with

gravity, right? So that’s why weight -bearing exercise is important. That’s why eating

a diet that’s high enough in protein and lifting weights is important. When you talk

about women though, particularly women who enter perimenopause and then menopause,

frailty affects longevity, number one, and frailty also affects health span.

So you’re looking at the lower end of people in terms of their weight. You

mentioned all the GLP -1 drugs, which you literally can’t open your eyes today and

not hear or read a headline about. They are not new, despite the fact that people

think they are new. The first GLP -1 drug was FDA approved for the management of

type two diabetes in the United States in 2005, all right? So we have two decades

of information about how these drugs work, their risks and benefits, their pros and

cons. The headline, like so many other headlines in medicine and health about losing

too much muscle with these drugs, it’s as usual,

it’s the deep dive behind that headline, where it’s really important for people to

get the right information, which is that if you’re talking about someone with the

condition of obesity or with the condition of overweight. And believe it or not,

that’s what it’s called. It’s not being overweight. It’s a condition of overweight.

Don’t ask me. Okay, that one, but it is,

um, they have a larger percentage of muscle mass, but just based on their weight,

but it is dysfunctional slash pathologic muscle. Okay, so when they lose more muscle

with their weight loss, when they’re on a GLP -1 drug,

not all of that lost muscle is well -functioning, healthy muscle,

right? So this guts us into this arena, which I talk about a lot in my newsletter,

but whether it’s talking about GLP -1s, or whether it’s talking about Veozah, or any

other medication. This is where thinking like a doctor is so important.

It’s not what’s the risk of the drug versus don’t take the drug.

It’s what’s the risk of the drug and what’s the risk of a person with obesity not

taking the drug and continuing to be obese. Significant, right?

So that’s not a question mark. We know conclusively what those risks are. So if

there is a treatment that will result in a significant amount of weight loss, which

these drugs have been shown to do, okay, in conjunction with a healthy lifestyle and

good behavioral modifications, that is worth the risk of a person losing 45 to 50 %

of their lost weight from muscle, right? And especially when you can say,

well, then what do you do about that? Well, if you know that you’re on a

medication that has that risk, are there things you can do in your behavior that

can kind of moderate or mitigate that risk? And the answer is yes, there are.

Eat a diet that’s high in healthy protein and lift weights so that as you’re losing

weight, if you’re someone with a BMI that falls in the obesity range,

you’re actually building new healthy functional muscle. And so the reason that most

people haven’t heard that is because I just gave you a 90 second answer.

Colleen: And when you hear a headline, people think like clickbait, one little question,

it’s as simple as that. And people have maybe a five second attention span to hear

something that’s yes or no, black or white, medicine and science are rarely that

simple. So that’s a perfect example. I’m so glad you asked about that. And I think

this goes back to you saying women need to be their own best advocates. They need

to do the research, have their questions for doctors.

Colleen:  And you’ve been so generous with your time, I just have one more question. For those of us in postmenopause and

are believe so because we seem to be just living a wonderful life postmenopause,

but is I think some of our listeners think the day you’re done postmenopause,

you have no more hot flashes, no more symptoms, can Veozah be prescribed postmenopausal

for postmenopausal women?

Dr. Ashton:  First of all, you’re probably not going to be surprised

when you hear me say that every woman should talk to their doctor and their

healthcare provider. That, you know, you’re very kind with calling me,

you know, the doctor for the country, but everyone should talk about that with their

own doctor. There’s a lot of controversy in the world of menopause medicine right

now about, is there a time window for certain types of treatment and management?

Remember that VEOZAH is FDA approved to treat moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms,

hot flashes and night sweats due to menopause. So if a woman is having those

symptoms, she should have that conversation with her doctor. There’s no, you know,

it’s not one size fits all. You can’t say to a woman, well, sorry, you’re 55 and

I said, like the door is closed. My grandmother would say, well, then open a

window.

So there’s such a wide variety in how long symptoms can last, particularly hot

flashes and night sweats, can last for a decade in black women, for example. So

there’s certainly no line in the sand where any informed, educated,

health care professional or doctor should say, you’re over this line if you’re having

those symptoms. So absolutely, it keeps going back to education awareness and having

that discussion with a woman’s doctor.

Colleen: Well, we appreciate so much all of the

answers that you gave me to the questions because we know it’s going to help our

listeners and also we would love for you to come back and talk about your results

from your experiment.

Dr. Ashton: Okay, you got it. What you’re taking with you and what you’re

going to

Colleen: – That’s right, anytime, anytime. – Thank you, Dr. Ashton, I appreciate it so much.

Dr. Ashton: – Thanks, Colleen.

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