Investigation
BROKEN HRT

Women are being forced to pay up to NINE times over the odds for HRT and trade drugs in shady car parks

DESPERATE women hit by Britain’s HRT crisis are paying up to nine times over the odds — and even trading drugs in car parks, The Sun can reveal.

A “black market” is forming as more than a million women battle to cope with shortages, which experts warn could last well into the summer.

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Desperate women hit by Britain’s HRT crisis are paying up to nine times over the odds — and even trading drugs in car parksCredit: Getty
A 'black market' is forming as more than a million women battle to cope with shortagesCredit: Alamy

Some are being driven to the verge of suicide while others are quitting work as crippling symptoms return.

Claire Hattrick — who runs menopause support group clipboardclaire.com — said women had already resorted to buying HRT on social forums or even meeting strangers to trade medication.

She said: “This is a huge problem and it’s getting worse.

“Women are meeting up to trade in car parks and saying, ‘I’ll give you a pump of this if you give me some patches’.

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"It shouldn’t be like this. It is ruining lives.”

Diane Danzebrink — founder of Menopause Support and the Make Menopause Matter campaign — added: “The level of anxiety this is causing is huge.

“I’ve heard of women going to 30 chemists to try to get a prescription. Some women are swapping with friends.

"Others are resorting to buying it from online pharmacies where they are charged extortionate amounts.”

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Working with experts, the Fabulous Menopause Matters campaign aims to help all women — regardless of their age, income and background

Many women who suffered brain fog, anxiety and hot flushes before being given the treatment fear going back to a world they hoped they had left behind.

Labour MP Carolyn Harris told The Sun: “Imagine if you’ve taken a long time to actually get to recognise your menopause and then you actually manage to convince a doctor to give you HRT.

Then you get HRT, you started to feel normal again, and then that’s been withdrawn from you.

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“No wonder women are driving up motorways to meet women in car parks, to borrow or to buy HRT from them.

“It’s not a life choice for these women. It’s essential.”

She said campaigns such as Menopause Matters, launched by The Sun’s Fabulous magazine, had helped empower women but the Government failed to plan ahead.

She added: “This shortage is not happening anywhere else in the world. It’s only in this country.”

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