All Hot Flushes & Night Sweats in Werribee

What this category covers
Support for hot flushes, night sweats, temperature swings, and the sleep disruption that often comes with vasomotor symptoms in perimenopause/menopause.

  • If you’re waking drenched or changing clothes at night, track frequency and seek targeted support.
  • If daytime flushes affect work or confidence, explore both lifestyle and medical options.
  • If symptoms feel sudden or intense, rule out other causes with a clinician.

Who can help: Menopause-informed GP, women’s health clinic, gynaecologist, endocrinologist, allied health for lifestyle support.

Start here: Perimenopause and Menopause Symptoms and Stages (Australia)

Safety: Seek urgent care for chest pain, fainting, severe shortness of breath, or night sweats with fever/unexplained weight loss.

How listings are reviewed

Providers listed here are reviewed for menopause relevance and alignment with our standards. “Reviewed” means we check fit and clarity — it does not mean we verify clinical outcomes or replace medical advice.

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Dr Samina Ahmed

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Hot flushes are the most recognised symptom of menopause, affecting up to 80% of women during perimenopause and menopause. They can range from occasional mild warmth to frequent, severe episodes that disrupt sleep, work, and daily life. Hot flushes are treatable — multiple effective options exist, both hormonal and non-hormonal — and women do not need to simply endure them.

In plain terms: Hot flushes occur when declining oestrogen levels disrupt the brain’s temperature regulation centre, triggering sudden waves of heat, flushing, and sweating. Night sweats are the same mechanism occurring during sleep, often causing partial wakings that fragment sleep architecture even when the woman doesn’t fully remember waking.

How severe can hot flushes become — and how long do they last

Hot flushes vary significantly in frequency, intensity, and duration between women. Some women experience a few mild episodes per week that cause minimal disruption. Others experience 10 or more per day, with intense heat, visible flushing, drenching sweats, and a rapid heart rate that takes several minutes to settle. For women in the more severe range, hot flushes can significantly affect concentration at work, social confidence, sleep quality, and overall quality of life — and warrant active treatment rather than watchful waiting.

The duration of vasomotor symptoms is also highly variable. Many women experience hot flushes for 2–5 years around the menopause transition. A significant proportion — particularly those who begin experiencing hot flushes during perimenopause — may have symptoms for 7–10 years or longer. Symptoms do not inevitably diminish quickly, and waiting them out without treatment is not always the most appropriate approach.

Treatment options for hot flushes — what the evidence supports

Menopausal Hormone Therapy (MHT) is the most effective treatment for hot flushes and night sweats, with consistent evidence showing 75–90% reduction in frequency and severity for most women. Current Australian guidelines support MHT use for healthy women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause onset, and it is available in several forms including patches, gels, tablets, and implants. The progesterone component required for women with a uterus is also available in forms including micronised progesterone, which has a favourable safety profile and evidence for improved sleep quality. A menopause-informed GP or specialist can assess whether MHT is appropriate for your individual situation.

Non-hormonal medical options are available for women who cannot or prefer not to use MHT. Certain antidepressants (SSRIs and SNRIs such as venlafaxine and paroxetine) have reasonable evidence for reducing hot flush frequency, as does gabapentin. These are prescribed off-label for hot flushes and require GP assessment. Oxybutynin, primarily used for bladder urgency, also has emerging evidence for hot flush reduction. Fezolinetant, a newer non-hormonal medication that works on the brain’s temperature regulation pathway, has been approved in some countries and may become available in Australia.

Lifestyle approaches including reducing alcohol, caffeine, and spicy foods, managing stress, and maintaining a healthy weight have modest evidence for reducing hot flush frequency and are reasonable as adjuncts to other treatment. They are unlikely to be sufficient alone for women with moderate to severe symptoms.

What type of provider to see for hot flushes and night sweats

A menopause-informed GP is the appropriate first point of contact for hot flushes and night sweats. They can assess the full symptom picture, discuss MHT and non-hormonal options, and prescribe accordingly. For complex presentations — including women with a history of breast cancer, cardiovascular disease, or other conditions affecting treatment decisions — referral to a gynaecologist or specialist menopause clinic is appropriate. Naturopaths and integrative practitioners listed in this category offer complementary approaches; some evidence exists for certain herbal and dietary interventions as adjuncts, though none match the efficacy of MHT for moderate to severe hot flushes.

Common questions about hot flushes and night sweats

How long do hot flushes last during menopause?

Hot flushes last on average 7–10 years in many women, though the duration varies significantly. Women who begin experiencing hot flushes during perimenopause (before their final period) tend to have a longer total duration. Symptoms typically peak in intensity around the time of the final period and gradually reduce over subsequent years, though this pattern is not universal.

What is the most effective treatment for menopause hot flushes in Australia?

MHT (menopausal hormone therapy) is the most effective treatment, reducing hot flush frequency and severity by 75–90% for most women. It is recommended in current Australian guidelines as first-line treatment for vasomotor symptoms in healthy women without contraindications. A menopause-informed GP can discuss whether MHT is appropriate for your individual health history.

Are there non-hormonal treatments for hot flushes?

Yes — SSRIs and SNRIs (certain antidepressants), gabapentin, and oxybutynin all have evidence for reducing hot flush frequency and are options for women who cannot use MHT. Lifestyle modifications including reducing alcohol, caffeine, and trigger foods can provide modest additional benefit. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) has some evidence for reducing the distress caused by hot flushes even when frequency doesn’t change significantly.

Can diet affect hot flushes during menopause?

Diet can have a modest influence on hot flush frequency for some women. Reducing alcohol, caffeine, spicy foods, and large meals may decrease trigger-related episodes. Phytoestrogen-rich foods including soy and flaxseed have some evidence for mild hot flush reduction in some women, though results are inconsistent. Dietary changes alone are unlikely to be sufficient for moderate to severe symptoms but are a reasonable adjunct to medical treatment.

Does MHT stop hot flushes immediately?

MHT generally produces noticeable improvement in hot flush frequency and severity within 2–4 weeks of starting, with full effect typically reached at 8–12 weeks. The response is usually significant — most women experience a clear reduction rather than complete elimination. If improvement is insufficient after 12 weeks, dose adjustment or a change in delivery method is usually the next step with your prescribing GP or specialist.

For comprehensive information on MHT options in Australia including types, delivery methods, and safety evidence, read our MHT in Australia guide. For broader menopause treatment information, see our menopause treatment guide.

Browse menopause-informed GPs, specialists, and allied health providers for hot flushes and night sweats in Melbourne and Sydney, or search the full Australian menopause directory.