Tag: supplements

  • The Natural Menopause Method by Karen Newby: Summary, Key Ideas & Review

    Book in one sentence: A BANT-registered nutritional therapist walks you through a food-first, supplement-supported framework for managing menopause symptoms without relying on HRT.



    What Is The Natural Menopause Method About?

    Most menopause books land in one of two places. Either they read like a clinical briefing (all evidence, no warmth) or they drift into vague “eat clean, reduce stress” territory that sounds helpful and means almost nothing. Karen Newby’s book sits in a more useful middle ground.

    Newby is a BANT-registered nutritional therapist with a degree in Nutritional Medicine. Her angle is practical: she wants you to understand the biochemistry well enough to make confident choices, then give you specific food, herb, and supplement interventions tied to each mechanism. The book is not anti-HRT. A menopause specialist contributes a foreword positioning HRT as one valid tool among several, and Newby frames her approach as complementary rather than competing. That framing matters, because it keeps the book usable for women across a wide range of circumstances.

    What sets this apart from generic wellness content is the specificity. Newby explains why declining oestrogen produces hot flushes (it disrupts insulin sensitivity and triggers adrenaline surges), why sleep unravels (oestrogen supports serotonin, which is the precursor to melatonin; progesterone supports GABA, the brain’s calming neurotransmitter), and why constipation is a hormonal issue rather than just a digestive inconvenience. Once you know the mechanism, the food recommendations stop feeling arbitrary.

    The Four Shifts: How Newby Structures the Approach

    The book’s backbone is a sequenced protocol called the Four Shifts. Each shift addresses a different physiological layer, and the order matters.

    Shift 1: Reset comes first because of something most women don’t know: the adrenal glands are the body’s backup source of both oestrogen (as the weaker form, oestrone) and progesterone when the ovaries start to wind down. Chronic stress means those same adrenal glands are busy prioritizing cortisol instead. As Newby puts it: “Stress (survival) trumps sex hormones.” Addressing cortisol load before anything else is not a soft wellness suggestion. It is a physiological prerequisite.

    Shift 2: Cleanse focuses on the liver and gut as an integrated oestrogen clearance system. The liver converts oestrogen into less active forms; the gut eliminates them. Disruptions anywhere in this pathway (poor diet, constipation, low microbiome diversity) cause processed oestrogen to be reabsorbed rather than excreted, raising total oestrogen load even as the ovaries produce less. Newby calls this the estrobolome effect, and her interventions address both ends simultaneously: brassicas daily for liver support, fermented foods and ground linseed for gut elimination.

    Shift 3: Rest maps specific food and supplement strategies to the three clinical sleep failure modes she sees in her practice (trouble falling asleep, trouble staying asleep, waking exhausted). Tryptophan-rich foods support serotonin and melatonin production. Magnesium supports GABA. Avoiding tyramine-rich foods near bedtime (cheese, cured meats, wine, chocolate) prevents noradrenaline spikes that keep the brain alert.

    Shift 4: Eat optimizes phytoestrogen intake and nutrient density. This is Newby’s “sparkplug” model: macronutrients are the fuel, micronutrients are the sparkplugs. A car will not run without both. The final shift covers the therapeutic phytoestrogen protocol, whole-food swaps, and supplement quality guidelines.

    The shifts are sequential but not rigid. A woman with severe insomnia might start with Shift 3. The framework is a map, not a prescription, and Newby’s repeated framing is “consistency over perfection.”

    Why Does Blood Sugar Keep Coming Up in a Menopause Book?

    It comes up because it is everywhere. Blood sugar instability is the single highest-leverage variable in the perimenopause symptom picture, and Newby returns to it in nearly every section.

    Here is the short version of the mechanism. Oestrogen helps regulate insulin sensitivity. As oestrogen declines, cells become less responsive to insulin. Foods that produced stable energy at thirty-five now create larger glucose swings at forty-five. Those swings trigger cortisol and adrenaline (already overtaxed at perimenopause). In vasomotor terms, a glucose low triggers an adrenaline surge that causes vasodilation, which is how blood sugar directly drives hot flush frequency. In mood terms, the same low amplifies anxiety, irritability, and the impulse to eat something immediately.

    Newby’s practical protocol is not complicated:

    • A 12-14 hour overnight fast (nothing exotic, just not eating at 10pm)
    • Protein and fat at every meal to slow glucose absorption
    • Never skip breakfast (which extends the cortisol spike from overnight fasting)
    • Caffeine only with food (on an empty stomach, caffeine puts the body into fight-or-flight and raises cortisol directly)

    “I liken sugar to pouring petrol onto a fire — the flames burn really bright and kick out a lot of heat, which can give us a sense of energy; but after this short spike the flames become even smaller than they were before. Putting protein and good fats on the fire I liken to coal — although the flames don’t burn as brightly, more heat is produced and they burn for longer.”

    The food swap table in this section is among the more practically useful pages in the book. The 3pm coffee-and-biscuit ritual (which Newby notes works partly through habituated dopamine cues, not hunger) gets replaced with fresh mint tea, miso soup, tamari seeds, or falafel with hummus. These are crowding-out strategies rather than restrictions.

    She also brings the emotional eating angle into this framework. Physical hunger builds gradually, involves stomach grumbling (the hormone ghrelin), and is resolved by eating. Emotional hunger arrives suddenly, is unrelated to the last meal, and is not resolved by eating (which is why the craving continues after the food is gone). The Japanese have a word for it: kuchisabishii, meaning “lonely mouth.” The dopamine reward system drives craving behavior regardless of hunger state, and ultra-processed foods are engineered to spike that system. Knowing this does not eliminate the craving, but it reframes what is happening: it is a neurochemical response to a product designed to produce it, not a character flaw.

    What About the Weight Changes?

    Weight gain during perimenopause, especially around the middle, follows a specific hormonal logic that Newby explains clearly. As oestrogen declines, the pattern of fat storage shifts from hip and thigh to abdominal, which is a testosterone-dominant pattern. The abdominal fat itself then converts testosterone to oestrogen (through an enzyme called aromatase), which can raise oestrogen load even as the ovaries produce less, creating a feedback loop.

    Phytoestrogens are Newby’s sharpest tool for addressing this pattern directly. These are plant compounds structurally similar to oestradiol that bind to oestrogen receptor sites and modulate them bidirectionally: reducing symptoms from oestrogen excess and relieving symptoms from oestrogen deficiency. NICE guidelines confirm that isoflavones may relieve vasomotor symptoms. Research also supports their role in bone density, memory function, and reduced oxidative stress.

    The three main sources:

    • Isoflavones (soya in cooked or fermented forms): tofu, tempeh, miso, natto, edamame; also chickpeas, lentils, peas
    • Lignans: ground linseed or flaxseed (the highest dietary source), sesame seeds, cashews, brassicas, apples, apricots, cherries
    • Coumestans: soybean sprouts, alfalfa, split peas, pinto beans

    Two practical rules stand out. Cook or ferment soya before eating it (raw lectins may affect iodine uptake and are deactivated by heat and fermentation). Fermented foods also supply the lactic acid needed to absorb phytoestrogens in the first place, which is why kefir, sauerkraut, and miso appear throughout the protocol.

    On the supplement side, Newby’s guidance is quality-first: the form of the mineral matters as much as the dose. Magnesium glycinate or malate over oxide. Zinc citrate or picolinate over oxide. Calcium citrate over carbonate. Many supermarket supplements contain fillers, glycerol, sucrose, and talc, so reading the ingredients list matters more than reading the nutrient label.

    Sage (as herb, tea, or tablet) gets specific mention as an evidence-backed hot flush intervention: research supports reductions in both frequency and severity. Red clover isoflavone supplements similarly have research backing for vasomotor symptoms and mood.

    Is The Natural Menopause Method Worth Reading?

    Read this if you are in perimenopause or approaching it, want to understand the mechanisms behind your symptoms, and are willing to make incremental food-based changes over time. Women who have found generic “eat clean” advice unhelpful will get more traction here because Newby explains the biochemistry behind each recommendation. Women who are not on HRT (by choice, contraindication, or circumstance) will find a comprehensive food-first toolkit that few books in this category match. Women who are on HRT will still find value in the lifestyle layer.

    Skip it if you want a meal plan with precise macros, you are in North America and find UK supplement brands frustrating to source (the food interventions translate; the brand names do not), or you prefer narrative-driven health books (parts of this read more like a clinical reference).

    One caveat: the book covers an enormous amount of territory (biochemistry, recipes, pelvic floor rehabilitation, acupuncture, supplement protocols) in 256 pages. Some sections feel compressed as a result. The supplement lists in particular can feel overwhelming without a background in nutritional therapy. Start with the food interventions and treat the supplement section as a reference to return to.

    Books Like The Natural Menopause Method

    BookAuthorBest For
    The Natural Menopause PlanMaryon StewartBroader lifestyle approach with HRT alternatives
    Eat to Thrive During MenopauseJenn Salib HuberAnti-diet framework with intuitive eating integration
    Healthy HormonesMagdalena WszelakiHormone-balancing nutrition with lab-tested protocols
    The Menopause CompanionKathleen DaviesIntegrative approach covering conventional and natural options
    The Happy Hormone GuideShannon LeparskiPlant-based hormone support with cycle-syncing emphasis
  • The Natural Menopause Plan by Maryon Stewart: Summary, Key Ideas & Review

    Book in one sentence: A practical, protocol-driven guide to managing menopause through a phytoestrogen-rich diet, targeted supplements, and lifestyle changes. No HRT required.



    What Is The Natural Menopause Plan About?

    Picture the moment your doctor hands you an HRT prescription and says, essentially, “This is the thing.” You take it. Or you don’t. Either way you walk out wondering if there is another option that someone with actual clinical experience has actually tested on actual women. Maryon Stewart spent two decades building that option.

    Stewart is a UK-based healthcare campaigner and menopause advocate (not a doctor, importantly) who founded the Natural Health Advisory Service after navigating severe menopause symptoms herself. The book that came out of her clinic work is exactly what it sounds like: a step-by-step natural protocol covering diet, supplements, exercise, and relaxation. Her headline claim, drawn from NHAS patient data, is that over 91 percent of women who followed the plan felt their symptoms were under control within five months. She is an advocate, not a neutral presenter, and the book reads that way. Worth knowing before you start.

    At 192 pages, this is a genuinely short read (closer to a well-organized manual than a narrative). The recipes and menu plans take up a good chunk of it. What you are actually getting in the front half is a phytoestrogen framework, a symptom-to-supplement chart, and solid practical guidance on bone health, sleep, sexual wellness, blood sugar, and mood. For a beginner who wants to do something rather than wait, that combination is hard to find in one place.


    The Phytoestrogen Foundation: Why What You Eat Changes Everything

    The whole plan pivots on one number: 100mg of isoflavones per day. Stewart argues that hitting this target through food and supplements is the single most effective thing a Western woman can do for hot flashes, night sweats, and mood stability.

    The cross-cultural argument is where she starts. Japanese women consuming traditional soy-based diets take in 50 to 100mg of isoflavones daily. Western women average under 3mg. Japanese women historically had no word for “hot flush” because the experience was so rare. That 30-fold gap in intake, Stewart says, explains most of the dramatic difference in symptom severity between the two populations. The mechanism is not complicated: phytoestrogens are plant compounds that weakly mimic estrogen, binding to the same receptors and providing a gentle stabilizing effect when the body’s own estrogen drops at menopause. They are roughly 1,000 times weaker than animal estrogen, which is why they can’t replace HRT in severe cases, and also why they don’t carry HRT’s risks.

    Getting to 100mg daily from food is achievable with some structure:

    • A glass of soy milk: about 20mg
    • 100g of tofu: about 25mg
    • Two slices of soy and flaxseed bread: about 22mg
    • A pot of soy yogurt: about 10mg
    • Beans, lentils, and flaxseeds add to the total throughout the day

    Supplements are accelerants, not replacements for the diet. Stewart’s clinical observation was that diet alone controlled hot flashes within three to four months. Once she added isoflavone supplements, women were reporting improvement within one month. Her two first-line recommendations are Promensil (a standardized red clover supplement delivering 40mg of key isoflavones per tablet) and Arkopharma Phyto Soya capsules. Red clover is the richest known dietary source of estrogenic isoflavones, up to ten times richer than soy. Neither carries HRT’s risks of womb lining thickening or adverse breast tissue effects.

    One legitimate caveat: the research on phytoestrogens is genuinely mixed in ways Stewart doesn’t fully acknowledge. The epidemiological evidence (Japanese populations) is strong. The clinical trial data for isoflavone supplements in Western women is more modest and inconsistent. Hot flash reduction is the best-supported outcome. Bone density, cognitive protection, and cardiovascular benefits are plausible but less settled. Read this book as a practical protocol with real clinical history behind it, not as definitive science.


    How Does Stewart Approach Symptoms You Actually Have?

    The section most worth bookmarking is the symptom-to-supplement chart in the middle chapters. Instead of a single protocol for all menopausal women, Stewart maps specific supplements to specific symptom clusters. Some of the most practically relevant:

    • Hot flushes and night sweats: Start with Promensil. Add Phyto Soya capsules if needed. Femenessence (maca root, discussed below) for broader hormonal support.
    • Vaginal dryness: Omega-7 sea buckthorn oil twice daily, plus Phyto Soya Vaginal Gel twice weekly. Clinical trials showed restoration of elasticity and hydration within three weeks (a timeline worth knowing because most women assume these changes are permanent).
    • Low libido: ArginMax (an L-arginine blend) twice daily. St John’s wort 900mg/day when low libido accompanies depression, but check with a doctor first because drug interactions are real and well-documented.
    • Insomnia: Valerian 600mg at bedtime.
    • Joint pain: Glucosamine sulphate and chondroitin, plus high-strength fish oil.
    • Depression: St John’s wort 900mg/day.

    Femenessence (maca root, Lepidium meyenii) gets its own dedicated push from Stewart as what she calls a safe herbal alternative to HRT for general menopausal symptoms. Where isoflavones work by providing plant estrogen, maca works differently: it stimulates the pituitary and adrenal glands to support the body’s own hormone production rather than substituting for it. Clinical trial data cited in the book showed an 84 percent reduction in menopausal symptoms across hot flushes, night sweats, sleep disruption, fatigue, mood, and libido. The two formulations are MacaLife (for perimenopausal women still cycling) and MacaPause (for postmenopausal women).

    A note of honest skepticism: the maca evidence base is thinner than the soy isoflavone evidence, and much of the trial data cited comes from studies conducted by or affiliated with the product’s developers. Stewart’s clinical observations are consistent across twenty years, but independent replication of the 84 percent figure is limited. Use with that in mind.

    For women already on HRT who want to transition off, Stewart’s protocol is one of the book’s genuinely distinctive contributions. The sequencing rule matters: establish the natural plan first (four to six weeks), then reduce HRT. Trying to do both at once doesn’t work as well because the phytoestrogen diet needs time to build a meaningful baseline before HRT is tapered. Once the plan is running, halve the HRT dose for about a month (split pills, cut patches, or alternate days), then stop on a chosen date. Mild flush recurrence after stopping is normal; the response is to temporarily increase isoflavone intake, not return to HRT. The 91 percent success rate in Stewart’s NHAS data is from this protocol specifically, and it is internally generated data, not from an independent clinical trial. Still, twenty years of consistent outcomes is not nothing.


    What About Weight, Cravings, and All That?

    Seventy-five percent of UK women report food cravings during menopause, and chocolate is the most common one. Stewart has a physiological explanation for this that gets overlooked in most summaries of the book.

    Declining hormone levels compound pre-existing nutritional deficiencies in B vitamins, magnesium, and chromium, all of which are necessary for normal blood glucose regulation. When those nutrients are low, blood sugar swings widely. The brain demands a quick glucose fix, which drives the craving cycle. Eating processed sugar resolves the dip temporarily, triggering another insulin spike and another crash, which produces another craving. The cycle is physiological. It is not a willpower problem.

    Stewart’s solution is structural eating: three proper meals plus a mid-morning and mid-afternoon snack of nutrient-dense food (nuts, seeds, dried fruit). Never skip meals. Cut caffeine (which triggers insulin release and worsens the cycle), reduce alcohol, cut processed sugar. A chromium-containing B-complex supplement can support the transition during the early adjustment period.

    The weight picture connects here directly. Menopausal weight gain is partly driven by the craving-glucose-insulin cycle, not purely by calorie intake. Stabilizing blood sugar without restricting calories tends to produce better and more sustainable outcomes than calorie restriction while the glucose cycle is still firing. Stewart doesn’t frame this as a weight loss strategy, but the implication for anyone who has been gaining weight in perimenopause without obvious cause is worth sitting with.

    The book also has a useful chapter on bone protection (weight-bearing exercise four to five times per week is non-negotiable; swimming and cycling don’t provide the mechanical stimulus bones need) and a practical section on pelvic floor exercises for both vaginal health and urinary incontinence, framed not as optional maintenance but as a direct treatment for symptoms women commonly accept as permanent.


    Is The Natural Menopause Plan Worth Reading?

    Read this if you want a practical, step-by-step non-HRT protocol for menopause and you are tired of vague “eat more vegetables and reduce stress” advice. It is also genuinely useful if you are on HRT and want a structured way to transition off it, or if you are experiencing specific symptoms (vaginal dryness, insomnia, low libido, joint pain, cravings) and want targeted supplement guidance before seeing a specialist.

    Skip it if you want a balanced overview of HRT. Stewart is an advocate, and the book doesn’t pretend otherwise. Also skip it if you need the most current evidence base; some clinical specifics have been updated or complicated by research published since this edition. It is less clinically rigorous than Aviva Romm’s work or Liz Earle’s newer material, and more UK-market-specific in its product recommendations.

    One caveat: brand-specific supplement recommendations throughout the book (Promensil, Femenessence, Phyto Soya) appear with endorsement-level enthusiasm, and the book does not disclose whether any commercial relationships exist with those manufacturers. Verify current product availability and consult a healthcare provider before building a supplement protocol from a book. Any book.

    The honest bottom line: this is a beginner-friendly, protocol-driven menopause guide with real clinical history behind it, real limitations in how it presents the evidence, and genuine practical value for the woman who wants to act rather than wait.


    Books Like The Natural Menopause Plan

    BookAuthorBest For
    The Natural Menopause MethodCaroline NewbyUK-focused, similar diet-first approach with more current evidence
    Eat to Thrive During MenopauseJennifer HuberNutrition-focused, stronger evidence base, easier to read alongside Stewart
    The Menopause CompanionDr. Sarah DaviesMore clinically balanced, covers HRT and natural options without advocacy
    Happy HormonesLara BridenDeeper on the hormonal mechanisms, stronger research citations
    The Science of MenopauseClare KayeEvidence-based overview for women who want the research, not a protocol