- Persona
Helen Mathews
Cohorts: 40s-50s
Condition: Perimenopausal mood disorders
“Iʼve been given antidepressants, but I don't think it's treating the cause of the problem, I'm sure Iʼm menopausal.”
Snapshot
- Name: Helen Matthews
- Age range: 50
- Life stage: Perimenopausal, transitioning toward menopause, experiencing fluctuating hormones and mood changes
- Location: Commuter belt outside London (e.g. St Albans or Guildford)
- Occupation: Senior operations manager at a large retail brand, long hours, high pressure, hybrid working
- Relationship and family context: Married with two teenage children (15 and 17); often snappy or withdrawn at home due to exhaustion and irritability; feels distant from her husband and guilty about it
Health Context
- Relevant condition(s): Perimenopausal mood disorder due to fluctuating hormone levels (oestrogen, progesterone, and testosterone)
- Density of condition(s): Common — mood change affects ~95% of women in perimenopause (Newson Health data)
- Key symptoms experienced: Anxiety, irritability, tearfulness, emotional overwhelm, poor sleep, appetite changes (comfort eating), low confidence, indecision, poor concentration, occasional palpitations
- Severity and duration: Moderate to severe; ongoing for 15 months, worsening over the past four months
- Diagnosed or suspected: Diagnosed with “clinical depression” by GP and prescribed antidepressants, but suspects hormonal imbalance instead
- Current treatments or management: Low-dose antidepressant, caffeine reliance, glass of wine in evenings, minimal exercise, doesn’t spend time in nature, hasnʼt yet accessed bioidentical HRT
- Comorbidities or related factors: Sedentary lifestyle, chronic stress, marital tension, lack of self-esteem, time constraints due to commuting
Triggers and barriers
- Main triggers that worsen symptoms: Sleep deprivation, alcohol, high-pressure work environment, lack of daylight exposure, limited downtime
- Barriers to seeking care: Worried it is “just midlife stress”; GP dismissive or reluctant to prescribe HRT; misinformation online; doesnʼt know difference between synthetic and body-identical hormones
- Information gaps and misconceptions: Thinks HRT is risky or outdated; unaware testosterone can play a role in mood and energy; conflates perimenopausal anxiety with depression
- Emotional drivers and concerns: Feels trapped, misunderstood, and disconnected from her former self; fears sheʼs becoming “difficult” or “unlikeable”; guilt over being short-tempered with family
Goals and needs
- Primary health goals: Feel emotionally stable again, regain energy and focus, find a treatment that works beyond antidepressants
- Secondary lifestyle goals: Reconnect with husband and teenage kids, improve confidence at work, sleep better, and enjoy small pleasures again
- What “better” looks like to them: Feeling calm, competent, and optimistic; laughing easily; managing stress without emotional crashes; a balanced home life
- Relevant Resources
If your mood, confidence or ability to cope has changed during perimenopause or menopause, there is very likely a biological reason for […]
Menopause does not usually arrive all at once. For most women, it is a gradual transition that begins with hormone changes years […]
If your sleep has changed in your 40s or 50s, you are not imagining it. Waking in the night, lying awake for […]
If you have been prescribed Utrogestan, or you are wondering whether it might be right for you, it is very normal to […]
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