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Premature menopause triggers a heart health risk most women never see coming

Shekari PhilemonBy Shekari PhilemonMarch 23, 2026 Health No Comments4 Mins Read
Premature Menopause
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New research links early menopause to a significantly higher risk of heart disease, with Black women facing a disproportionate burden that demands urgent attention.

A woman’s reproductive history has long been recognized as a window into her long-term health. Pregnancy complications like preeclampsia, gestational diabetes and recurrent miscarriage have each been tied to a higher lifetime risk of heart disease. Now, new research is pushing that conversation further, drawing a direct line between when menopause begins and how the heart fares in the decades that follow.

A study published this month in JAMA Cardiology found that women who go through premature menopause, defined as menopause before the age of 40, face a meaningfully higher risk of cardiovascular disease compared to women who reach menopause at a typical age. The research also found that women in the premature group experienced 40 percent more heart attacks than those who went through the transition later in life.

A racial gap that cannot be ignored

Among the study’s most alarming findings is a stark racial disparity. Black women were found to be three times as likely as white women to report having gone through premature menopause. This matters enormously given that Black women already face a higher baseline risk of heart disease and, according to prior research, tend to experience menopause earlier than white women on average.

The underlying reasons for this gap are not fully understood, but the data points to a convergence of factors. Black women with premature menopause in the study had significantly higher rates of hypertension, elevated cholesterol and diabetes compared to white women in the same group. Beyond individual health conditions, access to care, systemic barriers within the healthcare system and structural inequities all likely play a role in shaping these outcomes.

The racial dimension of premature menopause does not exist in isolation. Research has also found that Black women experience higher rates of preeclampsia than white women, and a 2023 study published in the journal Circulation found that exposure to systemic racism doubled the risk of developing the condition. These overlapping vulnerabilities compound over time and make early cardiovascular risk identification all the more critical for Black women.

What the research does and does not tell us

The study offers important insight but comes with limitations worth noting. Participants self-reported the age at which they went through menopause, introducing the possibility of inaccuracy. Information about hormone replacement therapy and pregnancy-related health conditions was not included, both of which could influence cardiovascular outcomes. The cohort was also limited to women aged 55 and older, which means the findings reflect an association between premature menopause and heart disease rather than a proven causal relationship.

Still, the research adds meaningful weight to a growing body of evidence suggesting that menopause timing should be factored into cardiovascular risk assessments. Current risk scoring tools do not account for sex-specific factors like menopause timing, pregnancy history or conditions like preeclampsia, which means many women’s true risk levels are being underestimated.

What women can do right now

The research carries a clear and actionable message. Women who experienced premature menopause should tell their doctors and ask for a thorough cardiovascular evaluation. Midlife, roughly the window between ages 35 and 60, is a particularly important time to get proactive about heart health because interventions made during this period can have the greatest long-term impact.

Knowing key health numbers including blood pressure, blood sugar, cholesterol and weight is a practical starting point. Working with a healthcare provider to keep those within a healthy range addresses the most significant and treatable drivers of heart disease. Building and protecting heart-healthy habits, including managing stress, prioritizing quality sleep, eating well and exercising consistently, lays a strong foundation regardless of menopause history.

Women should also feel empowered to advocate for themselves in medical settings. Initiating conversations about cardiovascular risk, especially after an early menopause, is not overstepping. It is precisely the kind of proactive engagement that can shift outcomes. Early risk identification means early intervention, and that window of opportunity is one worth protecting.

Black women cardiovascular health heart attack heart disease heart disease prevention menopause premature menopause racial health disparities reproductive health women's health
Shekari Philemon

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