This evening Google News served up this article in the New York Times – it seems particularly relevant (and somewhat cautionary in regard to high doses) considering some of the conversation recently about menopause and women using testosterone.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/26/magazine/what-its-like-when-your-wife-goes-on-testosterone.html
Note, that sometimes NYT has a stubborn paywall, but you might be able to find the article via another source. As the link specifies, it is in the 2025-December-26 NYT MAGAZINE (not the regular part of the daily newspaper).
Men: Wouldn’t it be a turnabout when you say to your wife of many years: “Honey, I need to take a short break, I can’t keep up with you.” It would certainly be different to have that problem! 
Unfortunately, the article may do more to scare women away from including testosterone in their therapy. As you pointed out, the article applies to doses much higher than testosterone levels in a 20 year old woman.
That’s like someone complaining they were rushed to the hospital after consuming a liter of vodka.
Safe HRT and TRT includes periodic monitoring of hormone levels. A medical practitioner that refuses to monitor levels or prescribes doses twice that of the normal range should have their medical licenses revoked.
They did present the benefits but it was with the mistaken suggestion it was associated with excessively high dosage. It’s also interesting this article comes about a month after the administration removed warnings from any form of HRT for women. I think the Times cleverly tried to discourage the use of HRT using fear. My take, and as this group already knows, HRT is how we discovered our anal only lifestyle.