Menopause can affect every workplace – here’s how to start supporting every worker experiencing it
- Written by Kathleen Riach, Professor in Management,, University of Glasgow

Menopause is receiving a wave of increased attention about its relevance to businesses and economic prosperity more broadly. Many high-profile initiatives[1], including British TV presenter Davina McCall’s documentary, Sex, Mind and the Menopause[2], are working to increase people’s understanding of how symptoms can affect working lives. But whose menopausal workplace experiences are being taken into account to shape this understanding?
This was a question that my colleague Margaret Rees[3] and I asked ourselves recently when exploring the evidence[4] about the diversity of menopause experience and work. And what we found was that how we think about menopause at work is heavily skewed towards the experience of women in professional occupations, and often those who are white and middle class.
Menopause is a shared yet unique time of life for women and people who menstruate. While menopause marks the one-year anniversary of a person’s final period, it often includes symptoms in the years running up to and after this time. Awareness, education and acceptance are key to supporting menopause at work.
But using a diversity lens suggests that the way people experience menopause at work can be significantly affected by socioeconomic position, ethnicity and racialised cultures. It can also be particularly complex[5] for people who go through menopause but do not identify as women. These are all groups that are already more likely to face discrimination at work, marginalisation in the labour market, and are more likely to be in poverty in later life.
One of our key findings is that we need to better understand and account for the menopausal experiences of those who are in low-paid and precarious modes of work. These areas of the labour market are often less likely to see provision and support that proactively challenges inequality or discriminatory practices surrounding menopause.
Research has found that socioeconomic conditions affect where women are located in the labour market as well as their experience of menopause. Some reviews[6] suggest that women in manual jobs may experience more psychological menopausal symptoms such as anxiety or low mood than those in white-collar workplace settings. Others suggest[7] women in casual or irregular work will experience more muscular skeletal symptoms during the menopausal transition.
References
- ^ initiatives (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ Sex, Mind and the Menopause (www.channel4.com)
- ^ Margaret Rees (www.linkedin.com)
- ^ evidence (www.sciencedirect.com)
- ^ particularly complex (www.tandfonline.com)
- ^ reviews (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
- ^ Others suggest (www.sciencedirect.com)
- ^ Sunshine Seeds / Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
- ^ Living Wage Foundation (www.livingwage.org.uk)
- ^ gendered ageism (www.forbes.com)
- ^ more likely to face (www.independentage.org)
- ^ fastest-growing group (www.mercyfoundation.com.au)
- ^ Menopause whilst Black (www.thekarenarthur.com)
- ^ Dr Nighat Arif (www.balance-menopause.com)
- ^ poorer backgrounds (www.sciencedirect.com)
- ^ minority ethnic groups (link.springer.com)
- ^ affirming healthcare encounters (www.tandfonline.com)
- ^ mental health (link.springer.com)
- ^ twice as likely to be in poverty (www.jrf.org.uk)
- ^ All-Party Parliamentary Group on Menopause (menopause-appg.co.uk)
- ^ protected characteristic (committees.parliament.uk)