1st Edition

The Menopause Transition in a Relationship Context Voices and Choices at Midlife, 1991-2012

By Nomi Redding Copyright 2025
    150 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Drawing on a small-scale longitudinal study of mid-life women tracking their menstrual cycles within the context of their lives as a whole over a twenty year period, this insightful book documents general health, family, and life situation changes and continuities for the participants. At once a research report, a memoir, and commentary, this book uses rich interview data to explore the complexity of living beings consistently over time. Told through the women’s own voices, it shows diversity and commonality of experience and develops a new method of assessing interlocking variables, the Multiple Continuum Assessment, which represents the complexity of life as fluid, systemic, and opportunistic.

    This book makes the case that menopause is more than a collection of signs and symptoms. Women and their families experience continual change as a matter of fact. Overwhelmingly, they transact transitions with interest, survive challenges, develop new skills and resources, and come out on the other side. It concludes with recommendations for women, healthcare professionals and researchers.

    This innovative work is suitable for practitioners and academics with an interest in women’s health, women’s and gender studies, aging and health care, menopause transition and family systems research, as well as women themselves.

    Preface

    Acknowledgements

    Abbreviations and Acronyms

     

     

    PART ONE The Project

    1        Introduction

    2         Early Years 1991-1996

    3        Middle Years 1997-2007

    4        Final Years 2008-2012

     

    PART TWO The Study of Change Over Time

    5        Project Strengths and Limitations

    6        Life in Context: Depicting and Living with Change

    7        Multiple Continuum Assessment

    8        What Helps?

    9        Engaging Complex Living Systems

     

    PART THREE Conclusions and Recommendations

    10      For Women and Those Who Love Them

    11      For Health Care Providers

    12      For Researchers

     

     

     

    Biography

    Nomi Redding is a retired psychotherapist/clinical social worker and researcher based in Lawrence, Kansas, USA