All Weight & Metabolism Changes in Braybrook

What this category covers
Support for menopause-related weight gain, body composition shifts, cravings, and metabolic changes (including insulin resistance concerns) using evidence-informed strategies.

  • If “what used to work” suddenly doesn’t, choose menopause-informed nutrition + strength support.
  • If you’re gaining around the middle or feeling more blood-sugar swings, get a plan that’s realistic and trackable.
  • If you suspect broader hormonal or metabolic issues, start with a medical assessment and coordinated support.

Who can help: Dietitian, menopause-informed GP, endocrinologist, exercise physiologist, qualified nutrition professional.

Start here: Lifestyle and Wellness Support During Menopause

Safety: Seek medical review for unexplained rapid weight loss, severe fatigue, fainting, or symptoms that escalate quickly.

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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Maxwell Medical Group

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Menopause weight gain is one of the most commonly reported — and most misunderstood — changes women experience during perimenopause and menopause. It is driven by hormonal shifts, not willpower, and it responds to targeted, menopause-specific support rather than the same advice that may have worked in your thirties.

In plain terms: Menopause weight gain occurs because falling oestrogen levels directly affect metabolism, fat distribution, insulin sensitivity, and muscle mass. These are physiological changes — not a failure of effort or discipline.

Why menopause weight gain is different from ordinary weight gain

During perimenopause and menopause, oestrogen decline causes a shift in where the body stores fat — away from the hips and thighs and toward the abdomen. At the same time, declining oestrogen affects insulin sensitivity, making it easier for the body to store rather than burn energy. Cortisol, the stress hormone, often rises as sleep deteriorates, which amplifies both cravings and fat storage. Muscle mass also decreases as oestrogen falls, slowing resting metabolism further.

This combination means that eating and exercise habits that maintained weight for years may suddenly stop working — not because anything has gone wrong, but because the hormonal environment has fundamentally changed. Approaches that work with these changes, rather than against them, consistently produce better results than generic calorie restriction.

What types of providers can help with menopause weight gain

Several types of practitioners are equipped to support menopause weight gain, each with a different scope. An Accredited Practising Dietitian (APD) with menopause experience can assess nutritional patterns, address metabolic changes including insulin resistance, and build an evidence-based eating plan that accounts for the hormonal drivers at work. An Accredited Exercise Physiologist (AEP) can prescribe strength and resistance training — the most evidence-supported form of exercise for preserving muscle mass and improving body composition during menopause. A menopause-informed GP can assess for conditions such as thyroid dysfunction or insulin resistance, and discuss whether menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) may be appropriate, as MHT has been shown to reduce abdominal fat accumulation in some women. Lifestyle medicine practitioners may offer a more integrated approach covering nutrition, sleep, stress, and movement together.

What to expect at a first appointment

A first appointment with a dietitian or exercise physiologist for menopause weight gain typically begins with a comprehensive history — not just what you eat, but how sleep, stress, hormonal symptoms, and energy levels are affecting your daily patterns. A body composition assessment is often included. The aim is to identify the specific drivers of your weight changes and build a plan that is realistic within your life, not a generic programme designed for a younger metabolism. In Australia, dietitian consultations are eligible for Medicare rebates with a valid GP referral under a Chronic Disease Management (CDM) plan — worth discussing with your GP before booking.

Why calorie restriction often backfires during menopause

Significant calorie restriction raises cortisol, which increases abdominal fat storage — the opposite of the intended effect. It can also accelerate muscle loss, which slows metabolism further. The current evidence points toward adequate protein intake to protect muscle, strength training to improve body composition, and blood-sugar stable eating patterns rather than restriction. Working with a practitioner who understands the hormonal context of menopause consistently produces better outcomes than applying standard weight-loss advice.

Common questions about menopause weight gain

Why do women gain weight during menopause even with no diet changes?

Falling oestrogen changes how the body stores and burns fat, increases insulin resistance, reduces muscle mass, and often worsens sleep — all of which contribute to menopause weight gain independently of food intake. The metabolic environment has changed, so the same habits produce different results.

What type of provider should I see for menopause weight gain?

Start with your GP for a metabolic assessment to rule out thyroid or blood sugar issues. An Accredited Practising Dietitian with menopause experience is the most targeted choice for nutrition support, while an Accredited Exercise Physiologist can design a strength-based programme appropriate for this life stage. Some women benefit from seeing both.

Can a dietitian help with menopause weight changes?

Yes — an APD with menopause experience can identify the specific dietary patterns contributing to weight changes and build an evidence-based plan that accounts for hormonal drivers like insulin resistance and cortisol. This is different from general weight-loss advice and is worth seeking specifically.

Does MHT (HRT) help with menopause weight gain?

MHT does not cause weight loss, but research suggests it can reduce the shift toward abdominal fat distribution that occurs with oestrogen decline. Whether MHT is appropriate depends on your individual health history — this is a conversation to have with a menopause-informed GP or specialist.

Is menopause weight gain permanent?

No. Body composition can improve with targeted support, though the approach needs to match the hormonal context of menopause rather than methods designed for younger bodies. Many women find significant improvement with menopause-specific dietary and exercise support, and some see additional benefit when MHT addresses the hormonal root causes.

For a deeper look at what drives weight changes during perimenopause and what the evidence supports, read our perimenopause weight gain guide. For broader information on menopause treatment options in Australia including MHT, see our menopause treatment and relief guide.

Browse menopause-informed dietitians, exercise physiologists, and GPs in Melbourne and Sydney, or search the full Australian menopause directory.