Connect with us

News

Home insemination makes fertility care more affordable for thousands ineligible for NHS treatment

Published

on

At-home artificial insemination sees increasing popularity, as only 32 per cent of the IVF cycles in England are covered by the NHS.

The medical firm Béa Fertility is preparing to launch an intracervical insemination (ICI) kit that can safely be used at home, aiming to make fertility treatment more affordable for those who can’t afford IVF.

ICI is a type of artificial insemination that involves inserting sperm into the cervix by using a cervical cap. Unlike IVF, when an egg is removed and fertilised with sperm in a laboratory, ICI is a less invasive process that does not involve any hormonal or injectable treatment.

Nicole Leeds, Béa Fertility chief marketing officer, said: “IVF is the tool that is used most often, but it is not needed by everybody and it can be very expensive and invasive. There’s also a hidden cost of it  because unless you live in a big city, it can be quite hard to access multiple clinics for appointments.

“That’s why our focus is to make infertility care more accessible and affordable, but keeping the clinical standard. We wanted Béa to offer everything that you need within a kit sent to your home.”

According to recommendations by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), the NHS should fund three full IVF cycles to women under 40 who have been trying for at least two years, and one cycle for some women aged 40 to 42.

Yet, according to a recent report, more than 80 per cent of NHS clinical commissioning groups fail to meet this guidance, forcing couples to go private, where the average cost of a cycle is roughly £5,000.

For those who can’t afford these costs, ICI is a much cheaper alternative. Recent data suggests that ICI has a pregnancy success rate of 37 per cent after six treatment cycles and the trust in this kind of treatment is constantly growing.

“With medical devices is all about being able to speak clearly and honestly about efficacy making patients aware of their options,” Nicole adds.

“One of the most important things is that we will have medical device regulation under the UK regulator,” she explains. “All of our evidence, procedures and manufacturing will be approved in the same way that a device used in a clinician’s office is approved.”

A future partnership with clinics across the country could mean that the ICI home kit would be directly recommended by doctors to those patients who can’t afford IVF.

However, a problem remains unsolved. The UK law for single people or those in same-sex couples means that they will not be eligible for this kit because sperm bought from a sperm bank must be processed through a private fertility.

Nicole explains that unless the law is changed there is little companies can do. “Making sure that all couples can build the family they want is very important to us, but so is obeying the laws of the country that we operate in,” she adds.

“We are actively trying to help people understand fertility better and we are exploring making care accessible to everybody.”

The kit is set to launch later this year and will be priced between £250 and £300 estimated to be around five times cheaper than one round of IUI. The price includes two artificial insemination devices, as well as 20 ovulation tests, a few pregnancy tests and two semen containers.

For more info visit Béa Fertility.

 

 

 

Diagnosis

WHO launches AI tool for reproductive health information

Published

on

The World Health Organization (WHO) has launched an AI tool in beta to help policymakers, experts and healthcare professionals access sexual and reproductive health information faster.

Called ChatHRP, the tool was created by WHO’s Human Reproduction Programme and draws only on verified research and guidance collected by HRP and WHO.

It uses natural language processing and retrieval-augmented generation to produce referenced content and cut the time spent searching through documents across different platforms and databases.

WHO said ChatHRP also has multilingual capabilities and low-bandwidth functionality to support use in a wide range of settings.

The beta-testing phase is aimed at a broad professional audience, including policymakers, healthcare workers, researchers and civil society groups.

WHO said the tool can help users quickly access up-to-date evidence, find sources for academic work and verify information on sexual and reproductive health and rights.

Examples of questions it can answer include the latest violence against women data in Oceania for women aged 15 to 49, recommendations on managing diabetes during pregnancy, and whether PrEP and contraception can be used at the same time. PrEP is medicine used to reduce the risk of getting HIV.

WHO added that the system will be updated regularly as new HRP materials are published and includes a feedback loop so users can flag gaps in the information provided.

The launch comes amid wider concern about misinformation in sexual and reproductive health.

A 2025 scoping review found that misinformation in digital spaces is a systemic issue that can undermine human rights, reinforce discriminatory social norms and exclude marginalised voices.

The review also said misinformation can affect health systems by shaping provider knowledge and practice, disrupting service delivery and creating barriers to equitable care.

WHO said ChatHRP is intended to give users streamlined access to reliable information as a counter to “algorithms, opinions, or misinformation”.

Continue Reading

Wellness

Women’s HealthX unveils Northwell Health, Corewell Health, Biogen & more to headline Chronic Disease stage

Published

on

Women’s HealthX has announced its lineup of healthcare trailblazers speaking on Chronic Disease Management, alongside other specialisations including Fertility, Sexual Health, Maternity, Menopause and Cognitive Health, taking a holistic approach to women’s health.

It will bring together 750+ leaders across pharma, health systems, and innovation to address one of the most urgent and underexamined challenges in healthcare; the sex difference gap in data and evidence.

Since cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death among women globally, and autoimmune and neurological conditions affect women at significantly higher rates, Women’s HealthX will home in on chronic disease management with 17+ sessions spotlighting case studies and lessons learned.

The Chronic Disease Management Stage at Women’s HealthX responds directly to this gap, convening senior decision makers and innovators to explore how sex specific science, digital health, and new care models can reshape outcomes for women.

Attending pharma & healthcare organisations include:

  • Tracy Sims, Executive Director, Cardiometabolic Health, Eli Lilly
  • Adrian Kielhorn, Senior Director, Global Head HEOR Neurology, Alexion Pharmaceuticals
  • Lauren Powell, Head of Health Equity and Clinical Innovation, Biogen
  • Amy Kao, SVP, Head of Neuroscience and Immunology Research, EMD Serono
  • Stella Vnook, Executive Chair and CEO, Kaida Biopharma
  • Amanda Borsky, Director, Clinical Research, Northwell Health
  • Lacey McIntosh, Division Chief, Oncologic and Molecular Imaging, UMass Memorial Medical Center
  • Nicole Turck, Vice President Operations, Women’s Health, Corewell Health
  • Mette Dyhrberg, CEO, Autoimmune Registry
  • Lyn Agostinelli, Principal Consultant, Halloran Consulting Group

Sessions addressing the real gaps in women’s chronic care

The agenda features a series of high impact sessions tackling the structural and scientific gaps in women’s health:

  • Improving outcomes in obesity through evidence based person centered care: Eli Lilly
  • Tackling sex based health inequities by breaking down barriers and bias: Alexion Pharmaceuticals
  • Close the health equity gap in women’s health by improving how autoimmune diseases are diagnosed, treated and managed: Autoimmune Registry
  • How a GYN only care model is driving faster access to gynecological care: Corewell Health
  • Transforming early detection in ovarian cancer: new pathways to accuracy, safety, and better outcomes: UMass Memorial Medical Center

Panel discussions include:

  • Why chronic disease looks different in women and why health systems haven’t adapted: Biogen, Kaida Biopharma, EMD Serono
  • How can we better engage with our customers: Northwell Health, Halloran Consulting Group

Health equity starts here. REGISTER YOUR PLACE

Why This Matters Now

Women’s HealthX positions chronic disease not just as a clinical challenge, but as a critical frontier for innovation, investment, and system redesign.

From AI powered monitoring and digital therapeutics to real world data and integrated care pathways, the stage highlights where meaningful progress is already being made and where the biggest opportunities lie.

For the FemTech ecosystem, this represents a pivotal moment: aligning technology, clinical insight, and commercial strategy to finally close the long standing data and care gaps in women’s health.

About Women’s HealthX

Women’s HealthX is where the transformation of women’s health begins at its true foundation: data, science, and evidence.

It’s the leading event dedicated to closing the sex difference data gap and accelerating breakthroughs through science driven, real world case studies.

Taking place on December 3 to 4, 2026 in Boston, USA, the exhibition will bring together more than 750 healthcare leaders, including clinicians, payers, employers, investors, and policymakers.

Seven different stages with 150+ expert speakers taking an holistic approach to women’s health. From fertility, maternity, sexual health, cognitive health, menopause and chronic disease, we address care at every stage of a woman’s life.

Continue Reading

Menopause

AI maps how reproductive organs age differently during menopause

Published

on

An AI atlas has mapped how reproductive organs age through menopause, with the ovaries, vagina and uterus changing on different timelines.

To better understand how this process affects health, researchers at the Barcelona Supercomputing Center developed what they describe as the first large-scale atlas of female reproductive system ageing, using artificial intelligence.

The team combined 1,112 tissue images from 659 samples, covering 304 women aged 20 to 70, with gene expression data from thousands of genes.

This allowed them to reconstruct how seven key reproductive organs, including the uterus, ovary, vagina, cervix, breast and fallopian tubes, age over time.

The study used the supercomputing power of MareNostrum 5 together with advanced image-recognition methods to process the data.

Using deep learning techniques, the researchers detected visible tissue changes as well as the underlying molecular processes linked to ageing in each organ.

The result was a detailed, organ-by-organ map of the reproductive system’s ageing process.

The researchers found that not all organs age in the same way or at the same speed. The ovaries and vagina showed a more gradual ageing process that begins even before menopause officially starts.

By contrast, the uterus appeared to undergo more sudden changes around the time of menopause.

Even within a single organ, different tissues aged at different rates. In the uterus, for example, the mucosa, its inner lining, and the muscular layer did not change in sync. These tissues also appeared to be particularly sensitive to the hormonal and biological shifts associated with menopause.

Marta Melé, leader of the transcriptomics and functional genomics group at BSC and director of the study, said: “Our results show that it acts as a turning point that profoundly reorganises other organs and tissues of the reproductive system, and allows us to identify the genes and molecular processes that could be behind these changes.”

Building on the finding that organs age according to different patterns, co-first author Laura Ventura said the research “paves the way for personalised medicine where treatments are tailored to a woman’s specific molecular profile and the specific tissues showing the most age-related distress.”

The study also identified molecular signals linked to reproductive ageing that can be detected in blood samples from more than 21,441 women.

These biomarkers could allow doctors to monitor the condition of reproductive organs in a non-invasive way, potentially helping to anticipate risks such as pelvic floor complications without the need for biopsies.

According to the researchers, this could lead to simpler and more accessible clinical tools for tracking women’s health over time.

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025 Aspect Health Media Ltd. All Rights Reserved.