Unlocking opportunities in women’s healthcare

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One half of the world’s population is women. Women also account for 80 percent of consumer purchasing decisions in the healthcare industry.1 Yet, remarkably, women’s health has been considered a niche market and a mere subset of healthcare. Now, that’s starting to shift, leading to better health outcomes for women and presenting new opportunities for investors, companies, employees, and other stakeholders across the healthcare ecosystem. In this article, we seek to provide a practicable definition of “women’s health,” to present a brief historical background of how men’s physiology was often the default setting, and to identify value-creating opportunities for meeting women’s healthcare needs. In a related article, “The dawn of the FemTech revolution,” we take a deeper dive into FemTech specifically and explore the unique role that it plays.

Defining women’s health

Men’s and women’s bodies are programmed differently from conception.2 As the Institute of Medicine recognizes, “every cell has a sex,” and sex-based differences influence all tissues, organs, and bodily functions.3 These differences affect disease prevention, diagnoses, and treatments. Because women are often caretakers, better outcomes in women’s health also have cascading benefits for groups such as children and the elderly. Women’s health, in other words, contributes in a significant way to stronger, healthier societies.

Women’s health encompasses much more than just reproduction. Our definition takes a broad approach. When we consider women’s health, we incorporate both female-specific conditions, whether tied to women’s reproduction or some other facet of women’s biology, and general health conditions that may affect women differently or disproportionately (Exhibit 1).

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Conditions that pertain generally to females include, of course, reproduction: contraception, fertility, and maternal health. Female conditions also include gynecology, gynecological infections, menopause, and women’s oncology. General health conditions connected to women’s health are those that affect women differently (for example, cardiovascular disease), disproportionately (such as autoimmune disease, migraines, and osteoporosis), or are characterized by gender-based discrepancies in care (for example, pain and mental health). Women’s health also includes general health conditions for which sex differences are not precisely known or are not sufficiently studied, as is the case with Alzheimer’s disease. Scientists and physicians increasingly recognize that multiple diseases and conditions affect women differently than men and that treatments and therapies can differ in both subtle and significant ways.

Tracing the transformation

The recognition of sex-based differences is long overdue but has been accelerating rapidly in recent years.

As highlighted in recent books such as Invisible Women (Penguin Random House, March 2019), Doing Harm (HarperOne, March 2019), and Sex Matters (Hachette Book Group, June 2021), modern medicine was developed with male physiology as the default. A predisposition to the male body type has long been reflected in medical training, diagnoses, and therapeutic development, which has influenced how physicians and scientists have come to understand human physiology. As a result, men and women historically can have very different health outcomes.

Bias is complicated. For example, nausea, ingestion, and general discomfort might typically suggest heartburn. Women, however, experience these symptoms in the event of a heart attack more commonly than men do. Early research in cardiovascular disease, a top killer among both men and women, largely involved male subjects, leading to the hallmark symptoms of heart attacks being taught as pain in the left arm and chest. Women, however, owing to different underlying biology and risk factors, are reported to be more likely to experience other symptoms, which are often labeled as “atypical.” As a result, women have been found to be 50 percent more likely than men to be misdiagnosed following a heart attack and more likely than men to die from heart attacks.4

For years, women have been underrepresented in medical trials.5 In 1977, following birth defects in the wake of fetal exposure to some medications, including thalidomide, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommended that “premenopausal female[s] capable of becoming pregnant” be excluded from Phase 1 and early Phase 2 clinical studies.6 Protective in intent, the recommendation—which the FDA revised in 1993—had implications in researching differences in men’s and women’s health, including fundamental metabolic and hormonal differences that affect dosing.7 Consider the case of Zolpidem, a medication primarily used for short-term treatment of sleeping problems. Decades after Zolpidem’s approval and commercialization, the recommended dose for women was halved, in order to address the drug’s slower metabolism in women.

Basing healthcare solutions on male physiology opens the door to suboptimal outcomes; among other consequences, women are twice as likely as men to experience adverse events from drugs.8 Among medical devices, male-centric designs have also often been the default. Physiologic differences in load bearing, however, can result in up to double the failure rate of implants in women, as seen with certain hip implants.9

Women have also experienced differences in healthcare delivery.10 Despite reporting more severe levels, frequency, and duration of pain, reports show that women are less likely to be treated for pain; their symptoms are at times expressed as “emotional” or “psychosomatic.”11 Disparities can also be found in some provider policies. One analysis of gender-specific procedures found that physician fees in Medicare led to a bias in procedure selection because fees for male procedures were higher than for female procedures, more than 80 percent of the time, and were 28 percent higher on average—even though male procedures were typically no more complex.12 In another example, the associated physician’s fee in Medicare for the removal of a penile lesion is currently three times as high as for the removal of a vaginal lesion.13

Emerging opportunities

The current global innovation pipeline reveals mismatches between health investments and health needs. The gap highlights some remarkable opportunities for improving women’s health within female-specific conditions (Exhibit 2).

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In the aggregate, female conditions outside of oncology comprise less than 2 percent of the current healthcare pipeline,14 even as women comprise half of the world’s population. To contextualize and compare with disease burden, Hepatitis B, which afflicts twice as many men as women, has 41 times more biopharma assets relative to commensurate disability-adjusted life years.15 The disparity between allocations to healthcare in general compared with women’s health in particular is even more pronounced given that entire categories in female conditions are omitted from some health burden measures. For example, menopause and its associated symptoms are not captured in global disease burden databases, which look broadly at causes of death, diseases, injuries, and health risk factors.

There are significant opportunities for healthcare providers to consider reallocating resources to female conditions, including the following:

There is great potential to begin addressing these conditions in new ways. A suite of scientific advances can now be harnessed in women’s health. Recent advances in genomics, tissue engineering, and cell and gene therapy are ushering in a new wave of healthcare innovations that can be applied to underserved female-specific conditions. For example, researchers are studying transcriptomics (the study of all RNA molecules in a cell) for treating otherwise elusive conditions such as preeclampsia or preterm birth. Others are now using tissue engineering to create uterine organoids in order to push the knowledge frontier on endometriosis. The potential is vast to redefine a host of conditions, including endometriosis, preeclampsia, and unexplained infertility, and to achieve advances to the degree that researchers are already achieving with oncology and immunology. Investors, researchers, and companies alike have an opportunity to participate in this rising wave of innovation and to deliver a new era in women’s health.


Women’s health is not a niche market, and it includes much more than just maternal or reproductive care. Indeed, women’s healthcare presents enormous opportunities for value creation and for improving the lives and livelihoods of women, with positive effects that redound across society. The first waves of major change are already on the rise.

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