One billion women prompt call for menopause-friendly workplaces

One billion women prompt call for menopause-friendly workplaces

One billion women experience menopause around the world today. The International Menopause Society (IMS) has urged employers to take action ahead of World Menopause Day 2025, calling for stronger workplace awareness, practical support measures, and integration of menopause into global wellbeing and HR strategies.


With one billion women worldwide navigating menopause at any given time, the International Menopause Society (IMS) is urging employers to improve workplace awareness and support.

Ahead of World Menopause Day on 18 October 2025, the IMS — which founded the global awareness day in 2009 — has called for organisations to address stigma and provide structured, evidence-based support to employees experiencing menopause.

Its newly published white paper, The Role of Lifestyle Medicine in Menopausal Health: A Review of Non-Pharmacologic Interventions, highlights the role of sleep, nutrition, physical activity, stress management, and social connection in easing symptoms and improving long-term health outcomes.

The research provides a practical framework for HR leaders, suggesting initiatives that go beyond awareness campaigns, such as training managers to hold open conversations about menopause, adapting office environments for flexibility, and embedding menopause into broader wellbeing strategies.

Professor Rossella Nappi, President of IMS (2024–2026), said: “Menopause is not a disease, but it can bring symptoms and health risks that need personalised care. This year’s White Paper shows convincing evidence that lifestyle medicine, healthy eating, regular activity, good sleep, emotional wellbeing, and supportive relationships, can make a real difference.”

IMS medical advisor Dr Chika Anekwe added that “lifestyle medicine is at the heart of menopause care,” empowering women “to take control of their health and improve their quality of life during this pivotal transition.”

Professor Nappi said employers and HR professionals play a pivotal role: “By creating flexible, inclusive, and stigma-free workplaces, they not only improve women’s health and wellbeing but also strengthen retention, performance, and leadership pathways. Menopause is a workforce issue as much as a health issue.”

The IMS’s 2025 White Paper and accompanying resources are available at imsociety.org.

Founded in 1978, the International Menopause Society brings together global experts to advance research, education, and equitable healthcare for women in midlife. The organisation’s vision is for all women to have access to evidence-based knowledge and care throughout their menopause transition and beyond.


Stories for you

  • Rio Tinto invests in green iron, pauses project

    Rio Tinto invests in green iron, pauses project

    Rio Tinto partners with Calix on green iron plant project. The collaboration includes a A$35 million investment in a green iron demonstration plant, pausing Rio Tinto’s BioIron project. The new plant will use electric heating and hydrogen reduction….


  • Martech data blind spots threaten AI payback

    Martech data blind spots threaten AI payback

    Only two per cent of CMOs say their marketing data is strong. Most are investing in AI without fixing weak data foundations, leaving advanced tools underperforming and marketing budgets misfiring, according to new findings from Intermedia Global.


  • Many UK fintech founders eye overseas move

    Many UK fintech founders eye overseas move

    Rachel Reeves’ fintech strategy faces criticism from industry founders. Over a third of fintech founders criticised the UK Treasury’s approach, with some considering relocating overseas. Concerns grow over potential tax measures in the upcoming Budget.