Each year, an estimated 1.3 million women in the U.S. – typically those in their early 50s and many at the height of their careers – go through menopause. Yet, it’s a subject we don’t talk nearly enough about, especially in the workplace.
A new study from Bank of America, in partnership with the National Menopause Foundation, found that most peri- and post-menopausal women believe menopause has negatively impacted their work life, yet only a small percentage believe their employers recognize the need for menopause-specific benefits.
The study, which surveyed 2,000 female workers and 500 benefits managers, also revealed that half of peri-menopausal women – 51 percent – believe menopause has negatively impacted their work life.
While fertility struggles and post-partum depression benefits are increasingly viewed not just as a nice-to-have perk, but a vital way to attract and retain the best female talent – menopause-specific benefits aren’t talked about as much.
“This is as segment of women who are stepping into their power,” Maggie McGrath, editor of ForbesWomen, told Mika Brzezinski on Thursday’s “Morning Joe.” “They are vibrant. They have ideas, experience and wisdom we that can draw on. [But we can’t afford to lose] them from the workplace because we’re not offering them flexible time off, flexible working hours… hormone replacement therapy.”
The primary reason employers said they don’t offer menopause-specific benefits is that employees have not asked for them. Employers who offer such benefits said the most popular benefits include access to menopause health professionals, time off or flexible work arrangements and hormone replacement coverage by health insurance plans. Still, just one in three women were aware of such benefits and only one in 10 said they use them.









