GP and TV doctor Dr Amir Khan issues a health warning aimed at women who were born between 1966 and 1981, putting them in their 40s and 50s. Across the reports, he cautions that a specific “lesser-known” symptom should not be dismissed as simply part of ageing. The coverage says many women may interpret the symptom as normal age-related change and delay seeking medical advice. Dr Khan’s message is that the symptom can be associated with conditions other than ageing, and that prompt attention matters. The articles describe his guidance as encouraging women to take the symptom seriously and to seek appropriate medical support rather than waiting for it to go away on its own. While both outlets focus on the same general warning and age group, they frame the message around the risk of underestimating the symptom’s significance and the possibility of a wider range of underlying causes. The reports present the warning as a call for awareness and earlier action, not as a diagnosis of any single condition.