Special
WATCH NOW: Femtech Roundtable 2022 Can we bridge the gender health gap?

The femtech market is expected to reach US$50bn by 2025, but health inequalities remain.
In our first FemTech World x HealthTech World roundtable, five leading experts from around the world come together to discuss the opportunities and barriers in the growing femtech sector to find the answer to one pressing question – can we bridge the gender health gap?
Speakers:
Cindy Moy Carr, Vorsdatter Limited
Cindy Moy Carr founder and CEO of Vorsdatter Limited in Newcastle, which developed mySysters, an app for women in perimenopause and menopause, and myGauge, an app for men in andropause.
Cindy is an attorney, journalist and author of several books, including the ABA’s Guide to Healthcare Law.
Eran Eshed, Fairtility
Eran Eshed is the CEO and co-founder of Fairtility, the transparent AI innovator powering in vitro fertilization (IVF) for improved outcomes. He is a multidisciplinary business executive and serial entrepreneur with over 25 years of experience spanning numerous product and business domains.
Eran was a co-founder and chief business officer of Altair Semiconductor, a wireless chipset innovator acquired by Sony in 2016. He holds a BsCEE in electronics engineering from Tel Aviv University.
Keren Leshem, OCON Healthcare
Keren Leshem is the CEO and Board Director at OCON Healthcare – a leading women’s health BioTech company with a mission to introduce innovative intrauterine drug-delivery technology for an array of conditions and diseases to improve and impact women’s health and quality of life.
Prior to OCON Ms. Leshem headed the Corporate Development team at the European pharma company VISUfarma. She was a board member of a BioLight (TASE: BOLT) company: ViSci (which she previously headed as CEO) and an Open University lecturer in marketing and business english.
She was featured in FORBES and Entrepreneur magazine and sits on FemTech Lab’s admissions and advisory board. Keren makes sure to lead with passion, integrity and donate her time and her earnings to and with women entrepreneurs that are starting out their career path and those whom have made choices that require mentoring.
Christy Prada, Future Fertility
Christy Prada has over a decade of experience as a builder, from creating and guiding high-performing teams across a range of fields, to developing and scaling new models for commercial growth at start-ups.
With this experience and expertise combined with her passion for finding innovative solutions to the world’s toughest healthcare challenges, Christy leads the Future Fertility team in its mission to empower fertility doctors, specialists, and patients with advanced AI-driven insights globally.
Petronela Sandulache, CorDiFio Health
Petronela is the founder of CorDiFio Health a Switzerland-based digital health platform with the social mission to raise awareness and prevent heart diseases in women.
With 10 years of consulting experience in innovation, venture building, and startups, she is determined to empower every woman to be in control of her own health. Advancing health equity is her mission. One heart at a time.
Jyoti Sharma, TaraCares
Jyoti Sharma is the founder of TaraCares, a global health tech start-up focused on menopause and winner of Innovate UK Fast Start award, 2022. She brings more than 20 years of international entrepreneurial experience as a global growth execution leader for large-scale human-centred digital transformations working with EY, SAP, and Microsoft.
An SAP Press bestselling author and international speaker on digital transformation, she has worked across industry verticals and specialises in life sciences. Her client portfolio includes companies such as Johnson & Johnson, Bayer, Grifols, Pfizer, GSK among others.
News
Jill Biden visits Imperial on women’s health and AMR mission

Former US first lady Dr Jill Biden visited Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London to explore work on women’s health and antimicrobial resistance.
The visit was hosted by professor the Lord Darzi of Denham, who chairs the Fleming Initiative and directs Imperial’s Institute of Global Health Innovation.
Dr Biden, chair of the Milken Institute’s Women’s Health Network, spoke about the impact scientists, clinicians, innovators and investors can have on improving women’s healthcare.
Dr Biden stressed the importance of “collaboration, prevention and education” in improving women’s health globally.
At the museum, Dr Biden and Esther Krofah, executive vice-president of health at the Milken Institute, heard about the worldwide significance of the discovery and the contribution of women who, during wartime Britain, grew penicillin in bedpans to support early experimentation.
The discussion also explored how AMR is a key women’s health issue, with women disproportionately affected in low and middle-income countries, and in high-income settings where women are more likely than men to be prescribed antibiotics.
Dr Biden was shown an architectural model of the Fleming Centre in Paddington, which will bring together research, policy and public engagement to address AMR worldwide.
The second part of the visit brought together Imperial clinicians, researchers and innovators for a roundtable on women’s health priorities, including improving diagnosis, equity in maternity care and support during the menopause transition.
Participants highlighted wide variation in the quality of care for conditions affecting women and called for fairer access to services, with the postcode lottery named as a priority to address.
Professor Tom Bourne, consultant gynaecologist and chair in gynaecology at Imperial’s Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, described how AI could improve diagnostic accuracy for conditions such as endometriosis.
Equity emerged as a central theme.
Professor Alison Holmes, professor of infectious diseases at Imperial College London and director of the Fleming Initiative, highlighted persistent gaps in women’s representation in clinical trials, including antibiotic studies, which limits the ability to optimise care and treatments.
Dr Christine Ekechi, consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, drew on national maternity investigations to underline the importance of valid data, meaningful engagement with affected communities and rebuilding trust.
Menopause and midlife health were also identified as priorities for clinical research.
Professor Waljit Dhillo, consultant endocrinologist and professor of endocrinology and metabolism in Imperial’s Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction, described a new treatment for hot flushes, including for women unable to take hormone replacement therapy, such as those with a history of breast cancer.
The discussion then turned to bringing innovation into health systems. Innovators shared how data and technology are being used to close gaps in women’s health, while noting challenges in accessing funding to grow and scale.
Dr Helen O’Neill and Dr Deidre O’Neill, co-founders of Hertility Health, described predictive algorithms using self-reported data to help diagnose gynaecological conditions at scale.
Embedded into clinical workflows, the technology could reduce waiting times, identify conditions earlier and improve outcomes. They noted how “we have cures for the rarest genetic conditions but don’t even have the answers to common women’s health issues.”
Dr Lydia Mapstone, Dr Tara O’Driscoll and Dr Sioned Jones, co-founders of BoobyBiome, outlined work creating products that harness beneficial bacteria found in breast milk to support infant health.
By isolating and characterising key microbial strains, BoobyBiome has created synbiotics, combinations of beneficial bacteria and the food that nourishes them, to make these benefits accessible to all babies.
Speakers throughout the visit stressed the need to reduce variation in care quality and outcomes for women, strengthen prevention and education, and address power and equity in women’s health.
Professor the Lord Ara Darzi said: “It was a privilege to welcome Dr Biden and the Milken Institute to Imperial to meet some of the outstanding researchers, clinicians and innovators advancing women’s health.
“Imperial’s unique combination of clinical excellence and world-leading research positions us at the forefront of tackling the biggest health challenges facing society and the UK’s ambition for innovation demands nothing less.
“For too long, the health needs of women and girls across their life course have not received the attention they deserve.
“By working together across borders and disciplines, we can transform equitable access to care, accelerate the detection and treatment of disease, and ultimately improve health outcomes for millions of women in the UK and around the world.”
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