Pause and Co Healthcare

Neurology

Nausea in Menopause

Why nausea can appear during perimenopause and how to manage it.

By Dr Nadira AwalBMS Specialist2 min readMedically reviewed 9 July 2026
Fresh ginger root and lemon slices on a pale wooden board

Nausea is an under-recognised menopausal symptom. It can also be a side effect of starting HRT — usually settling within weeks.

Nausea is under-recognised as a menopausal symptom — and also a common early side effect of starting HRT.

Why menopause can bring nausea

  • Hormonal shifts affect gut motility.
  • Migraine and blood sugar changes contribute.
  • Anxiety and sleep disruption amplify it.

If nausea started when you began HRT

  • Very common in the first 6–8 weeks.
  • Taking oral HRT with food helps.
  • Switching to transdermal (patch or gel) resolves it for many.

Everyday help

  • Ginger tea, small frequent meals.
  • Regular hydration.

When to seek review

  • Persistent nausea beyond 8 weeks on HRT.
  • Nausea with vomiting, weight loss, or abdominal pain.

How Dr Awal approaches this in clinic

Every consultation starts with your full story — symptoms, cycle, medical history, family history and what you've already tried. From there we look at whether hormonal treatment, non-hormonal options, lifestyle changes or a combination will give you the best result, and we tailor the plan to your age, risk factors and preferences.

  • A detailed 60 minute first appointment — no rushed 10-minute slots.
  • Evidence-based recommendations aligned with NICE NG23 and BMS guidance.
  • Body-identical HRT considered first-line where appropriate.
  • Shared-care letters sent to your NHS GP so treatment can continue affordably.
  • Follow-up at 3 months to fine-tune your regimen and address side effects.
  • Ongoing annual reviews so your plan evolves with you.

Common questions we hear about this

Do I need to be at a certain age to be seen?

No. We see women in early perimenopause (often late 30s and 40s), through post-menopause and beyond. Age alone doesn't decide whether treatment is right — symptoms, health history and goals do.

Will my GP continue the prescription?

In most cases yes. After your consultation we send a detailed shared-care letter with the diagnosis, treatment plan and rationale so your NHS GP can prescribe on the NHS. Not every practice accepts shared care — we'll discuss this in your appointment.

What if I've tried HRT before and it didn't suit me?

Very common — often the type, dose or route wasn't right rather than HRT itself. We review what you've tried, why it didn't work, and adjust accordingly. Many women who thought HRT wasn't for them do well on a different preparation.

How long will I need to stay on treatment?

There is no set upper time limit for HRT. Current BMS and NICE guidance supports continuing HRT for as long as the benefits outweigh the risks for you personally. We review this together every year so you stay in control of the decision.

Where do you see patients?

All consultations at Pause and Co Healthcare are conducted securely via video, allowing us to support patients anywhere in the UK. Prescriptions and shared care arrangements are managed in the same way, regardless of your location.

About the author

Dr Nadira Awal is a British Menopause Society Advanced Menopause Specialist with 15+ years' NHS and private experience. She holds the BMS Advanced Certificate in Menopause Care, sits on the BMS Programme Planning Group, and advises the UK Government Menopause Strategy Group. Read her full profile.

General information only — not a substitute for personalised medical advice. Always speak to your GP or a menopause specialist about your own situation.

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