Health Minister Mark Butler has declined to say how the government intends to respond to a damning report that found both the health system and workplaces were failing women. Released on Wednesday, the report made 25 recommendations, including giving menopausal women flexible work arrangements, and giving extra training to GPs and increasing the time medical students spend on menopause and perimenopause - with the current curriculum only allotting for an hour of education during a five to six-year course. The senate committee also called on the government to consider paid gender-inclusive reproductive leave, plus a national awareness campaign on the condition, and for menopause to be taught in schools as part of the curriculum.

It also said there needed to be urgent action taken to address shortages of menopause hormone therapy, and reforms to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme to make the drug cheaper and more accessible to women who needed it. While Mr Butler acknowledged it was an “important inquiry,” and said some of the findings were “shocking,” he wouldn’t commit to whether the government would implement the recommendations. “This is now one of two really important inquiry reports the Senate has delivered to us around women’s health, and together, they tell a pretty shameful story of women not being taken seriously in the health system about their symptoms,” he told ABC Insiders host David Speers.

“Also our treatment regimes, our PBS medicines ...

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