The Dr Louise Newson Podcast - 68 – Testosterone: Why is it so hard to access?
Episode Date: May 21, 2026Why are so many women denied testosterone?In this episode, Dr Louise Newson is joined by US menopause specialist Dr Susan Hardwick-Smith for a vital conversation about testosterone and why so many wom...en are still being denied treatment that could transform their lives.Drawing on both personal and clinical experience, Louise and Susan discuss the widespread misunderstanding surrounding testosterone inwomen, why symptoms of hormone deficiency are so often dismissed as stress or depression and the importance of individualised care.They explore how hormones affect the brain, energy,motivation, cognition and long-term health, not just libido, and why current guidelines often fail to reflect what doctors see in real-life practice.We hope you love the podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, please make sure to follow us, leave a 5-star rating and share it with someone who might find it helpful.LET'S CONNECTSubscribe here 👉 https://www.youtube.com/@menopause_doctorWebsite 👉 https://www.drlouisenewson.co.uk/Instagram 👉 / @drlouisenewsonpodcastLinkedIn 👉 / https://www.linkedin.com/in/drlouisenewson/TikTok 👉 / https://www.tiktok.com/@drlouisenewsonSpotify 👉 https://open.spotify.com/show/7dCctfyI9bODGDaFnjfKhgLEARN MOREDownload my balance app 👉https://www.balance-menopause.com/balance-app/Get tickets for my new theatre tour, Breaking the Cycle 👉https://www.nlp-ltd.com/dr-louise-newson-breaking-the-cycle/Pre order my new book 👉https://bio.to/ThePowerofHormones
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's very exciting to have you here, usually with guests in the US.
I've never met them before, but I have had the pleasure of meeting you, having lunch with you, spending time with you recently at a conference in Los Angeles.
So it's great, Mo Keirha, who's been on my podcast twice.
Mo is a great friend of my husband, who's also a urologist, has been on my podcast talking about testosterone, and everyone wants to know about testosterone.
And it feels like testosterone is almost like a naughty word for some people and it's the best thing ever for others.
So I'm really keen to like just talk to you about testosterone but also about how we can individualise care for women and personalised care.
And just a bit about your approach really.
So you're a doctor.
You've got a really interesting background and you ended up being in,
America, even though you're originally from New Zealand. So even that's a great story. So can you just
say a bit about your background before we start talking about testosterone? Yeah. Well, that's such a nice
introduction. Thank you. It's so lovely to be with you. And I've been following you for ages and had this
amazing opportunity to meet you in L.A. at a meeting and we hit it off. And we've got connections,
as you said through Dr. Kura, who I just saw on your podcast a few weeks ago. So yes, I was born in
New Zealand, moved here when I was 18, trained as a traditional MD, went through the traditional
OB-Gen training. And I practiced traditional OB-GYN for 20 years, delivered 7,000 babies,
did all the surgeries, all the wonderful things that we can do in that specialty. But as your listeners
know, we learned nothing about menopause, like absolutely nothing. And so when I reached my mid-40s
and started having those symptoms myself, I was absolutely clueless about what to do to help myself.
I went through about a year of being untreated. I didn't think I was old enough to go through
menopause. I was a gynaecologist because I thought, I'm 45. That can't be happening.
Completely clueless. And then when I finally figured out how to replace my hormones safely and I
felt amazing, I retired from that traditional OB-Din practice, went into a menopause-specific practice
in 2020, not the best time to start a business in the middle of COVID, but I just had to do it.
I'm like, I need to do this. Honestly, I thought I would just have a quiet little life with just me and
my nurse practitioner. And that didn't work because it was so popular. Now we've got
three offices in Texas and growing and 12 providers and the virtual program and all the things.
And really, I think that we learn how to be menopause doctors by going through menopause
frequently, not always, but it becomes much more urgent when it's happening to you and all
these symptoms that you've been taught are just hormonal or she'll get over it or whatever
or like, holy crap, this is really serious. So just to give hope to your listeners, I know they've
heard it from you too. I felt absolutely hard.
like deadly awful and now I feel better than never and the difference is just
replacing those hormones and all of them yes estradiol,
progestone and testosterone absolutely so important yeah and so one of the
things about testosterone I'm learning every day is a new day and every day is a
learning day I always tell my children but I'm learning more and more about
testosterone from my clinical experience so we have thousands of women who use
testosterone and I very much
much like to talk about testosterone deficiency, like I would progesterine deficiency or
eustodial deficiency, it's irrelevant what the label is, whether I'm giving them the label of
PMDD or perimenopals or menopause. It's irrelevant actually. But I realize more and more that
testosterone deficiency occurs quite young for some women. There's quite a few of women who are
probably always been testosterone deficient. I couldn't agree more and I knew nothing about this.
what I was taught, which was sort of nothing, it was less I was taught, then it was just sort of
this assumption that we go throughout menstrual lives and then all of a sudden we go through
menopause and all three hormones drop or maybe didn't even hear about the third one, testosterone.
But what happened in my case is I was still perimenopausal.
I was still ovulating and still making estrogen and progesterone, but my testosterone was almost
zero. And all of the symptoms that I had initially or many of them were related to that
particular hormone being low. And I can't tell you the number of times. I wish I could go back
and apologize to the women that I misdiagnosed before this happened to me. And I probably told
them, you're fine. You know, you're still having periods. So maybe you just need an antidepressant or
maybe you need some, you know, marriage counseling or all the other stupid stuff we say when we don't know.
But in my case, a little bit of testosterone replacement changed my life. I don't want to
overstated, but it literally turned me back into somebody that I recognized as myself again.
Yeah, I remember about six or seven years ago, I was called up from NHS England with someone
quite senior. And he did a Zoom call with me and he said, Louisa, I thought in medicine
you were taught first do no harm. And I said, yes, of course. What are you talking about?
He said, well, I've heard that you prescribed testosterone to women with regular periods.
and we've all had a beating about this and discussed it
and we've agreed that this is a dangerous practice.
And I said, well, I beg to differ actually
because I have seen first-hand lots of women who have improved
and they said, he said, well, we've all agreed that's placebo
and it's dangerous what you're doing.
And I didn't have the confidence that I do now.
I didn't publish like I do now
and I didn't have the number of patients that I do now.
And I went away from that meeting.
and got very upset and actually cried
because I was crying for all those women
that are being denied a very safe hormone
and it's a shame it's called testosterone
because everyone thinks it's a male hormone.
And like you, I feel very different when I used testosterone
and I wish I'd started it about 10, maybe 20 years before I did.
I had my third daughter when I was 40,
but I know I was struggling from about the age of 35
and looking back, like I feel sharper and brighter and more mentally able now than I was probably 20 years ago.
You know, it's not such an effort to think, you know.
So interesting.
I've heard many of your guests talk about this before, but it does just, you know,
lead one to be kind of upset about, you know, how men are treated when their testosterone drops.
So, for example, it might drop by 50% between age 30 and 50 for the average man.
And he, very rightly so, is going to get replacement if he's symptomatic.
And ounces drop by close to 100 percent, yet we're not offered treatment.
And the international consensus that you're well aware of from 2019 is six years old now,
basically says chest ulcerals are only appropriate for post-menopausal women, which makes no sense at all.
But if you're somebody who isn't quite as experienced as you and I in seeing patients and are just referring to the guidelines,
you know, doctors, it's very wonderful that we have these great.
groups to make consensus statements to guide us. However, they're, you know, not always so, right?
If you're in practice, like you and I are seeing thousands of patients, we're going to learn things
that are not in a consensus statement because it takes decades for 25 physicians to agree on
anything and then publish it. So if we waited for that to happen, we would all be suffering for
decades. So sometimes it's just common sense. Okay, this patient's, you know, presenting with multiple
low testosterone symptoms. Her blood level shows her testosterone is low. We replace it appropriately
for a woman and lo and behold, she feels better. What on earth could be wrong with that,
no matter how old she is? Yeah, I do agree. One of the things I've written a lot in my book,
the power of hormones, is about how all three hormones, progesterone, and testosterone,
work in the body. And I've spent quite a lot of time writing about how it works in the brain.
So testosterone is very important, as you know, in every cell in our body and brain,
but it helps the communication with those neurons.
And it helps build that myelin sheath, which is like the conduction part, really, isn't it, of the nerves?
So it helps everything fire very quickly and effectively.
But it also helps with metabolism.
It helps with glucose metabolism in the brain as well.
And helps all the cells to work better.
And if you go within the cell, it helps all our mitochondrial.
which is the powerhouse of all ourselves to function better and reduce inflammation
throughout our brain and body.
So it has really important physiological actions everywhere.
So this obsession about libido is just weird in some ways.
I don't, it's quite degrading actually for women.
And don't get wrong.
Like you, I'm very happy talking about sex.
And I think it's important that people shift.
have libido and great orgasms, but I don't think that's the only thing we should be thinking of
when we're talking about a hormone that has these effects everywhere in the body. It just seems
weird. The idea, right, of course, the idea that this very powerful hormone that we're now
potentially lacking in perimenopause or menopause or even younger could only have one
benefit, it makes no sense. It doesn't target one thing. And so currently in the United States,
and I think in the UK as well, we're instructed if we read these consensus statements.
We can only say that testosterone is beneficial for HSDD or low sex drive and not all the other things,
which obviously it's great for many things.
I absolutely love the paper that you published recently about cognition and testosterone because
I hear from my patients, I'll tell you the same happened to me.
Words like optimism and motivation and getting my pet back and just saying yes to so.
social invitations instead of like, oh, I don't want to go. I just feel kind of blah. And it's often misdiagnoses
depression, as you know, and it may be sometimes depression, but why don't we try replacing the
natural hormones first? Because more often than not, that results the issue for the patient. I can
remember myself within two weeks as starting on hormones, going from just kind of feeling something is
wrong with me. Blah, I don't have any energy, motivation, no sex drive, but also no other types of
drive, just motivation, optimism, good feeling about the future, all those feelings. All of that
got better. And I actually started testosterone by itself, because I'm a scientist. I want to do a
study. I didn't want to start three things at once. So I started it alone. And this is a study with
one person in it, but it's certainly been duplicated many times in your clinic, mine, and other
anecdotal studies. It works. And, you know, if we're waiting 20, 30 years for a
randomized controlled trial that no one's going to pay for. In the meantime, everyone's going to suffer.
So, yeah, the idea that it's not safe to take a natural hormone that we've had all of our lives
makes absolutely no sense. We have to move away from that. So I totally agree. And over here,
more women, same in the U.S. and globally actually are, are understanding they're reading the same
evidence as we are. They're reading basic physiology as well, and they're understanding the importance
of this natural hormone. So they're asking for it more. More and more women are being turned away.
for the wrong reasons for testosterone, but some people are taking it.
So testosterone prescribing over here for women has overtaken for men, which I think is wonderful.
Good for you, probably largely due to you.
But recently it was written about in one of our local papers or our national papers.
And one of the ex-chairs from the British Menopal Society was writing about the harms of testosterone,
and she said it's abusive that women are being put.
prescribe so much testosterone. Now I think coming from a healthcare professional, that's quite a strong
language saying it's abusive to prescribe testosterone. And I think there are many drugs that may
be abusive when they are definitely associated with harms, you know, without informing
patients. But testosterone isn't one of my lists. I feel it's one of the most safe and transformational
medications that I've ever prescribed as a doctor, actually.
mind-boggling how that statement could arise. But I can perhaps sort of see an inkling of where
that might have come from because there were in the past and still exist, certainly in this country,
clinics where patients are given unsafe drugs that are either not biologically identical testosterone
or doses that are way too high for a female. And so I think because that happens,
we could throw the baby out with the bathwater and say,
Just because, in my opinion, irresponsible practitioners might offer this doesn't mean that there are responsible practitioners offering it.
So if patients have to be really careful and smart about whom they trust with their health care in any field.
And it's very important to anything that we prescribe, anything we do.
If you do it too much or too little, it's not going to have the same effect.
So, like me, you're very keen in holistic care and, you know, you're the most amazing athlete.
Like, I'm just like so impressed with all this, yeah, the triathlons that you do is just amazing.
But exercise, nutrition is like a no-brainer.
Everybody should do that.
But when we talk about hormones, we both agree that we're individual and personalised hormone balance is crucial.
And so there's been a lot of debate, especially since the Panorama program that was made about me, about high doses that I prescribe to some women.
And it's been very damaging over here in the UK, and I know it's infiltrated into other countries because then people think that these high doses somehow are a problem.
Now, one of the reasons I prescribe higher dues is for a minority of women in follow-ups is because they're not absorbing through the skin very well.
And so I spend a lot of time with patients optimizing doses,
but also not just the dose, the formulation.
So people really vary with how they absorb through the skin,
whether it's a gel, a cream, a patch,
you've got pellets of testosterone.
It's sort of, the first thing in my mind is making sure
that it's the proper hormone.
So is it progesterone, not a synthetic progestogen?
Is it estradiol, not ethanol-estrigyl?
Is it pure testosterone, like you say,
not some sort of anabolic steroid that's been made by goodness those two.
And then it's like a starting dose that's pretty standard for a lot of people.
But then on the follow-up, the whole way that it's been absorbed into the body is really important, isn't it?
And it varies so much between people.
Oh, so true.
So if you're putting something on the skin, one of the interesting things that I honestly did not know until probably a few years ago is that the drug company,
that make this stuff. Let's just say, for example, as standard starting dose for testosterone would be
five milligrams a day in Australia, that's five or a ton, right? So let's just say five to be conservative.
The understanding is that we're only going to absorb 10% of that. So there's a guess that 90% of it will be
lost. Well, that's a pretty wild guess. Is it 95% or 82%? Like, we have no idea. Everybody's
skin's different, like where it's placed at the time of the day.
day, the temperature, whether you exercise, if you've exfoliated your particular type of skin. So we can
use the same dose, just like you said, and we start with a reasonable dose, like say five,
five milligrams, for example, and then measure it. And I'll get quite different results from different
patients. Now, no harm will happen in that couple of months of, I tell patients, this is a trial
for you because you're an individual. It's an experiment with one person in it, but it's a safe
experiment because hundreds of thousands of other women have tried before you, and this is a very safe
dose. It might be too low, and we may have to increase it. By no means, is it going to be too high? So there's no harm. But I think
this idea that it's precision medicine, I mean, if we're putting a gel, especially if we're using
something like in this country, the male gel and being asked to divide this into 10. And what possible
planet is that precision medicine? That is like guest work.
That's the best. But I mean, this is what we have. So, I mean, no, nothing wrong with doing that,
but we have to understand it's a guess and we don't know how much you're going to absorb,
but it's not harmful to try. Now, men use gel and they have exactly the same issues. They don't
know how much they're going to absorb. The doctor measures it later. There's really no difference.
So I get annoyed to say the least with the fact that men have all these different options and
they are offered these options and counseled by their provider and they get to choose the one
that's best for them and everybody's happy about that. For some reason, it's different for women.
We're not allowed to use anything except the male product divided by ton. God forbid we use
anything that's a personalized dose like one of these. That's bad. And of course, pellets are
even worse. But truly, it's the same hormone. So the way we deliver an intel system really
doesn't much matter so long as we follow it and we're careful and judicious and, you know,
start with a reasonable dose and then listen to the patient, which is ultimately much more important
than what the blood test says in my case. It's, it's so important. You know, having anything made,
whether it's like you say, made in a pellet, made, it, a cream made in a gel, as long as it's
a proper testosterone at a dose that's suitable for women, it's a lot safer. And a few months ago,
I've used the cream for many years and I decided to try the gel
because I wanted to see, how easy is it to divide something by eight?
And obviously it's impossible.
But I also find that the gel's quite slippery and it sort of some of it fell onto the floor when I was using it.
But I persevered.
But actually, it only took about four or five days.
And I realized I couldn't think straight at all.
We just went down to Oxford, which is only an hour away from here.
And I fell asleep in the car like an old woman.
and I really wasn't concentrated.
My husband said to me,
if you've been playing with your hormones,
because you're acting like you used to be.
And I thought, I'm just, I just wasn't absorbing it.
Because I thought maybe I'm tired, you know, I'm very busy,
and maybe things are catching up.
So then I thought, I can't carry on like this,
because I did feel like that cotton wall brain.
So then I went back to the cream
and literally within a few days,
I'm like, well, I'm back.
And it's very interesting that the same dose,
you know, different vehicle,
different way of absorbing,
makes such a difference.
And if you've done my levels, who knows?
And I think we do do levels and you're the same and they're a guide.
One of the things that I do want to talk about, though, is the baseline levels.
So we do levels, we do blood tests like I'm sure you do on our new patients for two reasons.
One, it's quite interesting to see what their hormone levels are.
But secondly, we do other blood tests to make sure they're not low in iron or vitamin D or underactive
thyroid because we can't be saying, oh, your symptoms are due to low hormones. So as, you know,
practitioners, we look at everything. So that's important. But when you get the blood results back,
often the laboratories will say the results are normal, but the results are very low. So even if
your level is next to nothing, I had someone recently, her testosterone level was less than 0.4,
which basically means they can't find any. It still was marked as normal.
because they're saying it's normal to not have testosterone if you're in your 50s.
That's right.
Whereas it's just bonkers, isn't it?
Yeah, so that's a whole other thing.
When I was in traditional medicine, this is truly the way most doctors practice in this country.
It probably is the same there.
I was so busy that I had a nurse practitioner and I said,
just scan down the labs and tell me the ones that are abnormal.
I wasn't looking at every line by line.
I didn't understand that the reference range that labs,
that labs use is just simply saying this is what most people have. It's not in any way saying this is
optimal. So a woman who's 50, as you know, if she has an estradiol of zero, that's going to be
in the normal column or a testosterone of almost zero. It's in the normal column. What they mean by normal
is common, not optimal. So if we're looking at labs, and I totally agree with you, we want to look
at the number, not look, not the reference range and develop an idea of what's optimal. Now,
There's a lot of disagreement about what optimal levels are, but it's one of the pieces of the pictures.
How do you feel? Everybody feels, well, almost everybody does not feel well when her estradiol and testosterone are zero.
So how does the patient feel? We replace it, get it up to reasonable levels based on reasonable common sense.
And then if she feels better, that's great. But it gets missed so often, I can tell you back in the bucket of things I missed when I was in traditional medicine, I would have done the same thing.
We just were trained to look for stuff that turn the threat.
Exactly.
If it's got an asterix in red, then you pick it out in the other ways you don't.
And that's really important because so many people over here now are asking for their blood tests
and then they're told it's normal.
And it's not normal.
Same here all the time.
Yeah.
And then when we review patients, when they're on hormones, we do repeat levels.
But again, they're a guide.
And I know you have done this like I've done it, is measured your own hormone.
blood test over the course of a day. And it really fluctuates and changes. Yeah. And so, but the other thing I was
taught as quite a young doctor many years ago was that you look at the patient before you look at the
blood results. Absolutely. And we've had patients and I know you have that have had raised levels. And it's
caused panic. You know, alarm bells ringing other people's surgeries. But then I look at the patient and
she's telling me she feels well. She has no side effects. So what I usually do is say, well, just continue as you're doing.
Let's repeat your blood test in two or three months time.
Let me know if you have any side effects or problems.
And then usually when they repeat it, the level's absolutely fine.
Because it's only a snapshot.
It's like a little window, isn't it, to what's going on?
It doesn't reflect.
Yeah, totally.
Yeah, so obvious things like what time of day you go to your blood drawn.
I have some patients who use their testosterone morning and night.
So we want to measure it in the middle of the day.
Well, not every doctor's going to say that.
If you measure it an hour after you put it on, it's going to look a little higher.
On the other hand, if you missed a dose, it's going to look a little lowers.
I mean, there's so many factors that can affect, we've got to, like you said, look at how the patient's feeling.
If it's a little bit higher than the consensus suggests it should be and the patient's feeling well and not having any side effects, there are so many things that can affect that.
In the United States, we're still instructed and the consensus paper says measure total testosterone, not free testosterone.
and that's a whole other conversation.
The total testosterone doesn't really represent what's available for use,
but there's no consensus about what free testosterone should be.
So we're really having to use our common sense.
And God forbid doctors should use their common sense.
You know, my dad was a doctor.
And I mean, his whole clinical practice was based in common sense
because they didn't have all of these tools.
I think we've somewhat lost our common sense.
I totally agree.
I think we've lost confidence as well, actually, somehow as doctors.
so worried that something awful is going to happen.
And we're just writing up some data with MoC here, actually,
looking at nearly 2,000 women who have been on testosterone
to see if they have side effects.
So none of my clinicians can save the record
unless they mark any side effects with testosterone.
The clinicians get a bit annoyed because they have to go
and answer these templates.
But it's really important, actually.
And we're finding vanishingly rare side effects.
The commonest, as we know, is,
you can get some hair growth where you rub on the cream or gel.
It can stimulate the hair follicles.
But most women can deal with a slight hair growth on their thigh if their brain's working.
But the hair on the face, the voice changes, skin changes are vanishingly rare.
And actually, the few people that have had side effects have still carried on with their testosterone.
It hasn't been enough for them to change testosterone.
And I think that's really reassuring, actually, because if it's prescribed at the right dose
to the right person at the right time, it's very unusual to get side effects, isn't it?
Well, absolutely. And I'll just, this is not, I do not believe this is true. But if I play the
devil's advocate and I said that, okay, certain patient is going to have oily skin, acne,
maybe a few black hairs on her chin, she's not going to have cancer, heart disease,
never been shown to increase death from anything. Apart from these what I call nuisance symptoms,
if it's given at a reasonable level,
ask the patient what she wants to do.
I mean, this is a patient-centered conversation.
Like you said, I, if I had those symptoms, which I do not,
would completely keep taking it because I feel so much better.
I would just do what I needed to do to take care of those symptoms.
But if somebody told me I had to stop it
because of benign symptoms that are really my choice,
if I want to absorb them or not,
I mean, every drug in the world has side effects, potentially.
and we choose if we want to absorb those side effects or not,
and it should be a patient choice.
Now, I will say we don't really have those side effects of its dose appropriately.
And then another point to remember is we've got enormous amounts of data
on giving extremely high doses of testosterone to transgender people
who want to have masculizing side effects.
So this is a wanted and intended result for those patients.
So we know what happens when we give women male doses of testosterone
own because that community, that's their choice. And yes, they have masculizing effects. However,
they do not have cancer. They don't have heart disease. They don't have any other problems.
So when people say it's dangerous, it's not. And it's been studied very well in that community
and in the bodybuilding community. It's not dangerous. It just causes nuisance symptoms.
I'm not really reassuring. We just had a paper published today, actually, with MoCherst team as well,
but looking at our data. And it's over 11,000 women on
testosterone looking at clot risk.
And we followed people for a year and asked them about clock on testosterone as well as
estrogen and progesterone.
And the incidence was lower than background actually.
And the few people that had had a clot, they had predisposing factors.
So again, it's really reassuring for testosterone because there hasn't been much data about
testosterone and clot.
So we know how safe it is.
So it's incredibly frustrating.
I know you're frustrated and I'm frustrated.
because we are here as very privileged women who are able to access testosterone
and it's kept our physical health and our mental health as good as it can be.
And I think that's crucially important, but very frustrating that the majority of women
who have low testosterone globally cannot access testosterone and if they want it so many are denied it.
So I'm doing a lot of work and you're helping as well with Balance App to really allow
women to advocate for themselves and be stronger and have a voice. So as I end the podcast,
I always ask with three take-home tips. So what three things do you think women should say
to their healthcare practitioner if they want testosterone, but they've been refused it?
Well, I will struggle to narrow it down to three. I think the first thing I might say is
that I might be looking for another physician. But if that's not possible, reminding the
I've had this, I heard, I learned that I've had this hormone in my body all of my life. So how could it be
harmful to replace it? Secondly, might have to bring them some of the very good studies that we have
about the safety and efficacy of testosterone or refer them to your site. If I were cheeky, I might
say if he's a man, isn't it true that men can have their testosterone replaced? So what is the
difference with replacing it for women? Now, advocating,
in that way is not what we were taught. I was taught to be very polite, to believe everything my doctor
or my attorney or the priest said. But sometimes we have to understand that not all doctors are
educated the same and we might have to seek out someone else who's on the same page. Yeah. It's great
advice and we have to, I think as healthcare professionals and educators, we have to help other people
that aren't our patients to advocate for themselves as well. So this conversation is so important. And I'm
I'm very grateful for your time, Susan, and thank you again.
