Themed collections that group the women's-health topics worth reading together. Each links straight into the live evidence.
Autoimmune conditions in women: Autoimmune diseases fall overwhelmingly on women, yet sex differences in how they present, progress, and respond to treatment are studied unevenly. These pages gather the evidence base for the conditions where that gap matters most.
The menopause transition: A universal life stage that remains comparatively under-researched, and one where symptoms ripple across the heart, brain, bones, and mind. These pages follow the evidence from perimenopause through menopause and the conditions it reshapes.
Pain conditions dismissed in women: Pain is experienced, reported, and treated differently by sex, and women's pain is more often normalised or dismissed. These pages collect the conditions where that pattern has left the sharpest evidence gaps.
Pregnancy and the evidence gap: Pregnant and breastfeeding people are routinely excluded from trials, so the evidence guiding their care is thinner than it should be. These pages map the complications, the exclusions, and what the literature does and does not cover.
Heart and brain in women: Cardiovascular and neurological research was built largely on men, yet women carry much of the burden and often present differently. These pages gather the conditions where sex-stratified evidence is most needed.
Reproductive and menstrual health: From the menstrual cycle to fertility, this is women's-health research at its most specific, and often its most under-funded. These pages collect the conditions and questions that shape everyday reproductive care.
Mental health in women: Depression, anxiety, ADHD, and eating disorders show sex-specific patterns in prevalence, presentation, and treatment response that are inconsistently studied. These pages gather the evidence, including the perinatal window.
Cancers in women: Some of the most-researched women's cancers, and some of the least. These pages let you see how the evidence base reports on the women it studied, screening to treatment.