News
AI innovation of the year: Shortlist revealed

Three AI innovators have been shortlisted for a Femtech World Award.
The awards, delivered in partnership with headline sponsor Planned Parenthood, celebrates the brightest lights in women’s health innovation.
The event celebrates some of the best examples of leadership, innovation and impact in key areas that affect women’s health and wellbeing.
AI is helping to transform healthcare outcomes around the world by aiding diagnosis, freeing up clinician time and advancing drug discovery.
This award will recognise the AI innovators leading the field in this emerging space and making an impact where it matters most.
The award is sponsored by SiS: Women’s Health.
SiS: Women’s Health is a global platform driving impact in women’s health through innovation.
The platform empowers founders to transform their solutions into scalable, investible businesses by connecting them with a dynamic network of corporations, investors, and ecosystem enablers.
A winner from the shortlist will be chosen by the sponsor and announced at a virtual ceremony on May 28.
Congratulations to the shortlisted organisations and thank you to everyone who entered.
AI Innovation Shortlist:

Aeva Health is a addressing a real problem with a real solution—using AI as the only way to quickly and effectively bridge the gender health gap.
Data has been both our biggest challenge and our greatest opportunity in women’s healthcare.
Aeva solves this by leveraging AI to identify connections between symptoms that traditional healthcare misses, creating personalised insights from our growing proprietary dataset of women’s health patterns.

Ema delivers accessible, personalized health education, integrating with existing technology platforms provides actionable insights personalized to
individual needs.
Ema empowers women and the families they care for with the knowledge and confidence to make informed health decisions, reducing barriers and helping them better understand their health and seek appropriate care.
By making reliable, evidence-based information accessible through trusted platforms, Ema bridges significant gaps in care.

In January 2025, Future Fertility introduced its newest feature for oocyte assessments: Euploidy Insights.
This is the world’s first clinically validated AI-powered model to predict an egg’s likelihood of developing into a euploid blastocyst—a day 5-7 embryo with the correct number of chromosomes, which is a critical factor for successful IVF cycles.
Clinicians, embryologists and patients can now access non-invasive insights into an egg’s likelihood of euploidy before fertilization.
News
Research project of the year shortlist revealed

The Femtech World Awards is proud to reveal the shortlist for Research Project of the Year as part of the third annual global celebration of innovation, impact and leadership across women’s health.
From fertility science and perimenopause research to regional ecosystem analysis, the shortlisted projects reflect the breadth and growing influence of femtech research worldwide.
The category is sponsored by OncoGenomX, with the winner to be selected by a representative from the organisation.
OncoGenomX is dedicated to offering solutions and providing comprehensive support services that empower Drug Developers, Clinical Researchers, Oncologists,NextGenSeq Diagnostics Laboratories, NextGenSeq Service Organisations, Cancer Diagnostics and Therapeutics Companies to achieve their ambitious goals
The shortlisted entries for Research Project of the Year are:

Women’s health remains significantly underserved in South-East Asia, with persistent gaps in access, awareness, and quality of care carrying substantial social and economic costs.
This report examines the femtech landscape in Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, highlighting market trends, emerging technologies including artificial intelligence, and the evolving support ecosystem.
It identifies key challenges facing femtech founders, including limited access to finance, low awareness and persistent stigma, marketing constraints linked to content moderation, and gaps in tailored ecosystem support.

Led by Stephanie Willson, MD, of the IVI RMA Global Research Alliance, the study explored whether embryos that show certain chromosome abnormalities during genetic testing may still have the potential to result in a healthy pregnancy and live birth.
The research analysed more than 7,600 frozen embryo transfers and found that some embryos previously considered unlikely to succeed were still capable of leading to successful pregnancies, although at lower rates than embryos without abnormalities.
The findings could help fertility clinics and patients make more informed decisions during IVF treatment, particularly in cases where there are limited embryos available.
Rather than automatically discarding these embryos, the research supports a more evidence-based and personalised approach to fertility care.

For many women, perimenopause can feel confusing and unpredictable, with limited research explaining what is happening in their bodies.
Natural Cycles set out to change that by leading one of the largest studies ever conducted on menstrual and ovulatory patterns, uncovering new insights into how ovulation behaves as women approach menopause.
Conducted in collaboration with researchers from George Washington University, Seattle Clinical Research Center, Gennev and the University of California San Diego, the study analysed nearly one million menstrual cycles from more than 197,000 women aged 18–52 across more than 140 countries.
The scale of this dataset made it possible to explore menstrual patterns and ovulation in far greater detail than has traditionally been possible in women’s health research.
The Femtech World Awards celebrates the innovators, researchers and organisations driving meaningful progress in women’s health.
What happens next
Winners across all categories will be revealed during the virtual ceremony on June 19, with winners receiving a trophy and an interview with a Femtech World journalist.
Mental health
Women over 40 seeking raves for mental health benefits
News
Osteoporosis significantly increases risk of death in menopause, study suggests

Osteoporosis may raise the risk of death in postmenopausal women by up to 47 per cent, a new study suggests.
The findings point to an inverse relationship between femoral bone mineral density and mortality risk, especially within certain ranges.
Femoral bone mineral density is the amount of mineral in the thigh bone, which is often measured to assess bone strength and osteoporosis risk.
Dr Monica Christmas is associate medical director for The Menopause Society.
She said: “Osteoporosis often remains a silent threat after menopause, despite its profound effect on women’s lives—from loss of height, poor balance, and reduced mobility to disfigurement, pain, and even premature death.
“Early screening and preventive measures, including a calcium-rich diet (preferably from food sources), regular weight-bearing exercise, and hormone therapy when appropriate, can significantly improve bone health and reduce risks not only of fractures but also cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, and dementia.
“It’s time we bring this conversation to the forefront.”
In the study involving nearly 3,000 postmenopausal women, bone mineral density at four femoral sites was assessed using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, a scan commonly used to measure bone strength and fracture risk.
The analysis found that mortality risk was significantly higher when femoral bone mineral density reached the osteoporotic threshold or when osteoporotic fractures were present.
After full adjustment, osteoporosis was associated with a 47 per cent increased risk of mortality.
A stronger inverse association between increased bone mineral density and mortality risk was seen within specific ranges, suggesting bone mineral density could serve as a prognostic marker of wider health.
The relationship appeared especially notable within the range of 0.46 to 0.71 g/cm² for total femur bone mineral density.
Previous research has shown that postmenopausal women face a significantly higher risk of death within one year of hip or vertebral fractures.
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