News
Bia Care teams with Imperial College to tackle women’s health inequalities
The platform helps women to book appointments, attend group online consultations and get a plan for menopause management.

Menopause health start-up Bia Care has launched a randomised control trial that aims to tackle women’s health inequalities.
The research will be conducted in partnership with Imperial College London in order to bring together the work of national thought leaders on menopause inequality. It will build on the work of social campaigners and grassroots organisations.
Fernanda Dobal, CEO and cofounder, Bia Care said: “FemTech is the answer to closing the gender and racial health gaps. Digital health has shown its ability to overcome health inequalities across many clinical areas, such as long-term conditions, and mental health, however, women’s health has largely been overlooked. This randomised control trial gives a voice to this topic, that cannot be ignored.”
The trial was announced shortly after the company secured additional funding from the NHS to extend the digital platform roll out. It helps women to book appointments, attend group online consultations with doctors and get a personalised plan for menopause management. Women can also arrange any treatments needed to be delivered to their homes.
Speaking with FemTech World, Hannah Gibson, head of partnerships at Bia Care explained: The importance of a randomised control trial cannot be underestimated. Women’s health has struggled with being a low priority for decades (the UK has the largest gender health gap of all G20 nations), but that is amplified significantly when we consider racial and cultural health inequalities in the UK health system.
This study will give a voice to the unheard, we know that 25 per cent of people leave employment because their menopause is unmanageable, but people have never before been able to design a menopause service that meets their needs.
In this study, Bia Care is working with local people, and the local health economy to design a menopause service that meets the needs of everyone. The service will deliver care predominantly in virtual group consultations, as we know this improves patient experience, and also removes waiting times as well as reaching a greater number of women for the same cost to the NHS. The outcome of the study will be evidence showing how we can overcome health inequalities in menopause care.”
Bia Care and menopause studies
Bia Care is working with the UK’s thought leaders in health inequality and menopause. Phase 1 of the study will be about understanding what barriers exist to menopause care, and how this impacts a person’s life. Phase 2 will be an evaluation of an intervention.
Hannah added: “There is a paucity of previous research into this area. Limited research has shown poor messaging around menopause often leads to confusion and a feeling of discontent from the health system. The reality is that we have never before given a voice to people who live with menopause symptoms and are more likely to experience health inequalities.”
Diagnosis
Being female not a universal stroke risk factor for patients with AF, study finds

Female sex may not raise stroke risk across all atrial fibrillation (AF) patients, with higher risk mainly seen in women aged 75 and older, a study suggests.
Researchers said stroke prevention for women with the condition should be more personalised, especially for patients under 75.
Dr Amitabh C Pandey, director of cardiovascular translational research at Tulane University School of Medicine, said: “For years, female sex has been included as a risk factor along with other factors such as high blood pressure and diabetes, meaning women were more likely to be prescribed anticoagulants.
“Our study shows younger women may not have as much added stroke risk as previously thought, while older women, particularly those over 75, appear to have a higher risk that deserves close attention.”
The new Tulane University study challenges a long-standing assumption in heart care that being female automatically increases stroke risk for patients with atrial fibrillation.
Atrial fibrillation, often called AF, is a common heart rhythm disorder that causes the heart to beat irregularly.
It is associated with a higher risk of stroke and is often treated with anticoagulants, also known as blood thinners.
The study found that stroke risk did not increase equally across all female patients with AF.
Instead, researchers said being female may act more as a risk modifier, with increased stroke risk seen primarily among women aged 75 and older or those with a greater burden of other health conditions.
Clinicians often use a scoring system to decide whether people with AF should be prescribed blood thinners.
The system gives points for factors including age, heart failure, diabetes, previous stroke, vascular disease and high blood pressure.
Women also receive one point for sex alone.
Researchers said this can mean women with AF become eligible for blood thinners earlier or more often than men with otherwise similar risk profiles.
While blood thinners can help prevent clot-related strokes, they can also increase the risk of bruising, prolonged bleeding, gastrointestinal bleeding and other serious complications.
The researchers analysed approximately 950,000 patients with AF using TriNetX, a large anonymised electronic health record database.
They compared stroke outcomes between male and female patients across three age groups: younger than 65, 65 to 74, and 75 and older.
Male and female patients were matched based on age, other health problems and whether they had been prescribed anticoagulation medicine.
Among patients younger than 75, the study found no significant difference in one-year stroke risk between men and women.
However, among patients aged 75 and older, women had a modest but statistically significant increase in stroke risk compared with men.
In patients aged 75 and older with no additional risk factors beyond age, women had about one additional stroke per 629 patients compared with their male counterparts.
The findings support growing interest in a newer AF risk score, known as CHA2DS2-VA, which removes sex as a standalone risk factor.
However, researchers said more studies are needed and medical guidance remains inconsistent.
Han Feng, assistant professor at Tulane University School of Medicine, said: “This general approach came from women being underrepresented in AFib trials and studies comprising only about one-third of study populations.
“Our study shows not all women with AFib have the same risk profile, and these decisions should be individualised.
Pandey said: “These findings highlight the need for modern tools and approaches that can personalise risk profiles to individuals.
“The goal is not to undertreat patients who need stroke prevention, but to better identify who is most likely to benefit from anticoagulation and who may be exposed to unnecessary risk.”
Diagnosis
AI may help accelerate breast cancer diagnosis for high-risk women – study
Fertility
Infertility may be risk factor for early menopause, study suggests
Menopause1 week agoPerimenopause misinformation ‘putting women at risk’
News4 weeks agoNIH Grant terminations disproportionately impact minority scientists, research finds
Adolescent health4 weeks agoWUKA brings Period-Positive Pool Party to London Aquatics Centre to keep girls swimming through puberty
Insight3 weeks agoPCOS renamed after decade-long campaign to end ‘cyst’ misconception
Hormonal health2 weeks agoNHS urged to update website following renaming of PCOS
Mental health4 weeks agoCBT shows promise for menopause insomnia and hot flashes
Events4 weeks agoWHIS 2026 unveils agenda and first speakers for the leading women’s health summit
News7 days agoThree menopause innovators shortlisted for Femtech World Award
















2 Comments