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How to Find a Menopause Doctor

Symptoms getting ignored? Here’s how to make sure your menopause care is top-notch


illustration of a smiling female doctor with a stethoscope around her neck looks at a patient over video chat
Kyle Hilton

Key takeaways

  • Many women struggle to get menopause care; feeling dismissed is a sign to seek help elsewhere.
  • Many types of clinicians can provide menopause care; training and experience matter more than titles.
  • Certified menopause practitioners and coordinated care can improve treatment and follow-up.

Perimenopause, menopause and life after it can be tricky enough to deal with. But when your doctor doesn’t seem to know how to help you — or brushes off your concerns completely — it can be even more of a challenge.

“If you’ve brought up menopause concerns and felt dismissed, it’s not you — it’s a gap in the system. Your symptoms are real, and you deserve to be taken seriously,” says Dr. Heather Hirsch, a menopause specialist from Rochester, New York, and a Menopause Society certified practitioner (MSCP).

If you’re told menopause is just part of getting older or just part of being a woman, or that the symptoms you’re experiencing during the transition won’t last long, that’s a red flag to seek out care elsewhere, adds Dr. Laurie Birkholz, MSCP and a family medicine doctor from Holland, Michigan.

That doesn’t mean you have to ditch your primary care doctor or ob-gyn completely if you don’t want to, Birkholz notes. There are many professionals who can deliver competent care. Read on to learn more about menopause providers and how to go about finding one.

Gaps in knowledge, gaps in care

Most women in the United States do not receive menopause treatment. According to a 2025 report from AARP’s Public Policy Institute, just 5 percent of women ages 45 to 64 received menopause-specific care in 2021.

One contributing factor: knowledge gaps. New Research from AARP published March 19, finds that many women are unfamiliar with perimenopause — the time leading up to menopause, where estrogen levels fluctuate and periods become irregular — and that they learned about this phase only after symptoms began. Others report they didn’t know the symptoms  they experienced — low libido, hot flashes and trouble sleeping are common during this phase — were related to declining hormone levels until later in their journey.

This “massive education gap” creates hurdles in getting care, too, Hirsch says. She explains that most medical students and residents receive less than two hours of menopause training throughout their education.

AARP’s latest research found that women, unable to find a single, reliable place to learn about menopause, often turned to their health providers, and even still often received insufficient answers because their clinicians had limited menopause training or advice.

The MSCP credential indicates the provider has undergone menopause-specific training. More than 1,300 clinicians took the MSCP exam in 2024 — almost six times more than applied for the exam in 2022, the Menopause Society reports.

Types of menopause providers

Should you see your primary care physician or ob-gyn for menopause care? Look for a new one? Or retain a separate provider to help you navigate menopause?

The answer isn’t that simple; it depends on your doctor’s training.

A family medicine or internal medicine doctor, or an ob-gyn, can be certified to treat menopause, as can nurse practitioners or physicians’ assistants, says Dr. Stephanie Faubion, MSCP, director of the Mayo Clinic Office of Women's Health and medical director for the Menopause Society. Endocrinologists, cardiologists and dermatologists are also getting certified, Birkholz adds. Psychiatrists, physical therapists and nutritionists are as well, says Dr. Holly N. Thomas, MSCP, an internist and assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh.

However, it may help to see a separate menopause specialist if your primary doctor is not one, says Dr. LaReesa Ferdinand, an ob-gyn from Winter Haven, Florida. “Menopause is not just gynecology — it impacts metabolic, heart, brain, and sexual health,” she says.

Many women benefit from what she calls a “board of directors” for their health, where a menopause-focused clinician works alongside their primary care doctor.

Not everyone will have access to a certified provider based on where they live, Birkholz notes. In that case, look for a clinician you trust. If you seek out an online specialty clinic or find an MSCP that offers telehealth, retain a local provider who can coordinate in-person visits if you need monitoring or lab work, Birkholz says. See your primary care doctor yearly, as they can spot physical changes that an online provider may miss, Thomas adds.

Finding a menopause doctor

These tips can help you start your search:

Talk to your doctor. If your provider doesn’t seem to know much about menopause symptoms and treatments, or brushes you off, that may be your signal to look elsewhere. Some doctors know their boundaries and will tell you up front that they’re not the best provider for menopause care and will refer you to someone else, Birkholz says. 

Ask a friend. “Word of mouth is still definitely valuable,” Thomas says. Ask other women you trust if they have a doctor they like and trust who has helped them navigate menopause.

Look for specialty care. There aren’t enough certified providers for all the women who are experiencing menopause, Thomas says. Search the Menopause Society’s database to find an MSCP, says Dr. Mary Jane Minkin, a clinical professor at Yale School of Medicine, gynecologist and MSCP who manages the women’s health hub MadameOvary.org.

If you can’t secure one locally, look for a provider with some additional training or expertise caring for midlife women, Birkholz says — “not just somebody who says, ‘I do menopause.’ ”

Your local hospital may have a center for women in midlife, suggests Dr. Candice Fraser, an MSCP and ob-gyn at the Carolyn Rowan Center for Women’s Health and Wellness at Mount Sinai in New York City.

“The best doctor for menopause care isn’t defined by their title but by their training,” Hirsch says, adding that the MSCP designation is a “strong signal” that the provider has specialized expertise in midlife women’s health.

Consider online. “A good menopause clinic, online or in-person, should provide individualized care, follow-ups and a clear plan for managing your overall health — not just your symptoms,” says Hirsch, who formerly headed up clinical quality for the online menopause clinic Midi Health and launched her own telemedicine menopause practice, The Collaborative, in 2023. Still, there are some considerations with online clinics. (Read: Online Health Companies Are Booming: Here’s What Consumers Should Know Before Clicking.)

Prioritize collaboration. Many women keep their primary care doctor or ob-gyn for general care while also seeing a menopause specialist, Hirsch adds. That combination often works best as long as your care team communicates and your care feels coordinated, personalized and thorough, she adds.

What to expect from a visit

Your menopause provider should evaluate your cardiometabolic, bone, mental and sexual health, Birkholz says. Birkholz performs a full cardiometabolic panel and a baseline bone density test on her menopause patients. A menopause provider should ask if you have had any hormonal issues, such as premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) or complications during any pregnancy, which may predict menopause severity, she adds.

They should ask about symptoms, sleep habits, mood, body aches, vaginal or sexual changes, and your menstrual history, Thomas says.

What’s more, it’s critical for health care providers to rule out other conditions that may explain hormone-related symptoms, Birkholz says.

Testing should support the clinical picture, not replace it, Ferdinand says. “Women are often told everything is ‘normal’ based on a single lab value, even when they don’t feel well,” she says. There is no single test that defines menopause care — it’s the combination of clinical insight, symptoms and targeted labs (like thyroid, metabolic markers and nutrients) that guides good decisions.

Women should have routine assessments of cardiovascular risk factors, including blood pressure checks, lipid testing and glucose or hemoglobin A1C testing. Routine mammograms and cervical cancer screenings are recommended as well, Faubion says.

If you haven’t had lab work in a while, the doctor may order it, Thomas says. Hormone level testing depends on the individual, though it’s not always necessary with a thorough clinical exam, Thomas says.

Based on tests and evaluations, your doctor will determine the best available options to treat your symptoms, which may include prescription hormone and nonhormonal therapies. 

The key takeaways were created with the assistance of generative AI. An AARP editor reviewed and refined the content for accuracy and clarity.

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