June 3, 2026

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Menopause apps and products are moving beyond lifestyle tracking into clinical tools designed to work alongside healthcare.

The shift reflects growing demand from women who report delays in diagnosis, inconsistent guidance and limited consultation time.

The market is responding with products that combine symptom monitoring, behavioural support and telehealth access.

Among the platforms gaining attention is mySysters, founded in Newcastle upon Tyne in 2017 by Cindy Moy Carr when she needed a perimenopause symptom tracker and found none existed.

The app allows women to track symptoms, identify patterns and generate reports to share with healthcare providers.

Peri, winner of the Best Wellness Tech category at CES, is a wearable device that uses biosensors (body sensors) and AI to detect and decode symptoms including hot flushes, night sweats and fatigue.

Embr Wave offers a wrist-worn device delivering warming and cooling sensations intended to help manage hot flushes and thermal discomfort.

The company points to clinical research supporting symptom relief.

For clinicians, MENO.pause is a digital decision-aid created by doctors at University College London Hospitals and University College London, translating national guidelines into step-by-step consultation support.

US-based telehealth platforms are also scaling. Midi Health closed a US$50m Series C round in 2025 and now serves around 20,000 women weekly with care covered by major US insurers.

Evernow, backed by angel investors including Gwyneth Paltrow and Demi Moore, offers online menopause care with access to specialist clinicians.

Winona launched a community-driven platform combining peer support, expert resources and live clinician Q&A sessions, while HerMD was recently acquired by Joi + Blokes to form what the company describes as one of the US’s most comprehensive virtual women’s care platforms.

Consumer wearables are also adapting.

Oura launched its first menopause tool, the Perimenopause Check-In, in 2025 and has partnered with Maven Clinic to integrate biometric data (signals like temperature and heart rate) into care decisions.

Eight Sleep introduced Hot Flash Mode, responding to temperature fluctuations in real time based on data from over 1,200 menopausal women.





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