Natural Ways to Cope With Hot Flashes and Night Sweats

7 Ways to Cope With Menopausal Hot Flashes and Night Sweats Naturally

Drug-free strategies for beating the heat during menopause — morning, night, and in between.
7 Ways to Cope With Menopausal Hot Flashes and Night Sweats Naturally
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If you had to sum up menopause with one word, it would probably be “hot.” After all, hot flashes and night sweats — known as vasomotor symptoms, because they involve the dilation of blood vessels — get the lion’s share of the attention when it comes to menopause symptoms.

And with good reason: More than 80 percent of women deal with both as they transition to menopause, according to a review in the Journal of Mid-Life Health.

Medication, such as estrogen and even certain antidepressants, can help. But not everyone needs — or wants — to pop a pill to fend off menopause symptoms. That’s where more natural approaches to managing hot flashes and night sweats can come in handy.

1. Commit to cardio

Turns out what’s good for your heart can also be good for menopausal misery. “Exercise almost always improves symptoms and overall well-being,” says Cynthia Flynn, MD, a board-certified ob-gyn in Daytona Beach, Florida, and contributor to Just Answer. This is especially true of aerobic or sustained activities, such as walking. Research backs that up: A study published in the journal Menopause found that women who took part in a 16-week exercise program had fewer hot flashes than women who didn’t do the program.

2. HIIT the gym

High-intensity interval training (HIIT), which alternates stints of hard and easy activity, could help your body fight vasomotor symptoms by training it to respond more quickly to the dilation and constriction of blood vessels. This is key for rapidly off-loading heat, according to Stacy Sims, PhD, a physiologist who specializes in female-athlete performance and the author of Next Level, a guide to fitness for women in menopause or postmenopause.

Plus, HIIT increases your body temperature. As a result, the hypothalamus (part of your brain) learns to react better to sudden, intense temperature changes. A workout lasts no more than 30 minutes and uses intervals of 60–120 seconds with 1:1 or 2:1 work-to-rest ratios, so you’re either working and resting the same amount or working twice as long as you’re resting.

3. Hit the mat

Night sweats can make it hard to get a good night’s sleep. Yoga may help. A study published in June 2022 in Nursing & Health Sciences found that women who practiced yoga for 20 weeks got better sleep, plus previous research showed it can lower stress and relieve symptoms of depression among menopausal women.

You can always sign up for an online class or find a registered yoga instructor through the Yoga Alliance’s database.

4. Lift weights

You’ve probably heard that strength training can keep your bones strong. Now you can add reducing hot flashes and night sweats to the list of reasons to strengthen those muscles. In a study published in 2019 in Maturitas, women who did strength training three times a week experienced a nearly 50 percent reduction in hot flashes after 15 weeks.

5. Add more soy to your diet

Soy contains isoflavones, which are essentially plant-based estrogen. One of these isoflavones, daidzein, is converted by gut bacteria into a compound called equol, which has been shown to reduce the severity and frequency of hot flashes.

Case in point: One study, published in 2021 in the journal Menopause, found that when women added a half cup of cooked soybeans to their low-fat, vegan diet every day for 12 weeks, their hot flashes decreased by 79 percent. What’s more, most of the women stopped having hot flashes rated moderate to severe. You can find soy in tofu, miso, edamame, and soy milk.

6. Try a supplement

Many supplements are touted for menopause symptom relief, but the one that may be worth trying is black cohosh, a plant native to North America. The supplement rarely eliminates symptoms completely, Dr. Flynn says, but a study found that it reduced the number and severity of hot flashes among menopausal women. Talk to your doctor before trying black cohosh (or any supplement), because it may cause side effects or interfere with certain medications, such as statins.

7. Meditate

If you don’t already meditate, now may be a good time to start, because it may help reduce the number of hot flashes you have, according to a study published in Menopause. Meditation can help activate the parasympathetic nervous system, which is the part of your body that helps you relax, says Dr. Sims. Need help getting started? Try doing guided meditation on an app like Headspace or Calm.

kara-leigh-smythe-bio

Kara Smythe, MD

Medical Reviewer

Kara Smythe, MD, has been working in sexual and reproductive health for over 10 years. Dr. Smythe is a board-certified fellow of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and her interests include improving maternal health, ensuring access to contraception, and promoting sexual health.

She graduated magna cum laude from Florida International University with a bachelor's degree in biology and earned her medical degree from St. George’s University in Grenada. She completed her residency in obstetrics and gynecology at the SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York. She worked in Maine for six years, where she had the privilege of caring for an underserved population.

Smythe is also passionate about the ways that public health policies shape individual health outcomes. She has a master’s degree in population health from University College London and recently completed a social science research methods master's degree at Cardiff University. She is currently working on her PhD in medical sociology. Her research examines people's experiences of accessing, using, and discontinuing long-acting reversible contraception.

When she’s not working, Smythe enjoys dancing, photography, and spending time with her family and her cat, Finnegan.

Karen Asp

Author

Karen Asp is an award-winning journalist who covers fitness, health, nutrition, pets, and travel. A former contributing editor for Woman’s Day, she writes regularly for numerous publications, including Women's Health, Woman's Day, O: The Oprah Magazine, Prevention, Real Simple, Reader's Digest, Better Homes and Gardens, Martha Stewart Living, Forks Over Knives, VegNews, Weight Watchers, Oxygen, Good Housekeeping, Family Circle, Sierra, USA Today and its magazines, Cosmopolitan, Delta Sky, Costco Connection, Eating Well, Harper's Bazaar, Glamour, Parade, Runner's World, SELF, Shape, WebMD, Allure, and Best Friends, to name a couple of dozen.

Karen is the author of Anti-Aging Hacks and coauthor of Understanding Your Food Allergies & Intolerances. She speaks frequently about healthy living on radio shows and podcasts, as well as on live TV. She is a certified personal trainer, a health educator certified in plant-based nutrition, and a plant-powered athlete who holds several world records in Nordic walking.