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Kindr Health launches free menopause data hub on brain health

5 hours ago
By AI, Created 17:01 UTC, Jul 07, 2026, AGP -

Kindr Health launched a free, continuously updated global Menopause Data Hub that compiles sourced statistics, treatment data and clinical research on menopause, including its links to brain, bone and heart health. The launch aims to fill a major information gap for journalists, researchers, clinicians and women as science on menopause and cognition continues to develop.

Why it matters: - Menopause is being reframed as a whole-body transition, not just a reproductive milestone. - The new hub puts sourced data on menopause, cognition, bone loss and cardiovascular risk in one place for free use. - The resource is meant to support reporting, research and patient-clinician conversations at a time when interest in women’s brain health is rising.

What happened: - kindr Health launched the Menopause Data Hub on July 7, 2026. - The hub is a free, continuously updated global database of menopause statistics, treatment data and clinical research. - The company says the hub is designed to be freely citable by journalists, researchers, educators and the public. - The hub is available at kindr.health/menopause-statistics. - A companion Menopause Data Briefing is available at kindr.health/press.

The details: - The hub focuses on the brain-menopause connection and the neurological effects of menopause symptoms such as brain fog, memory changes, disrupted sleep and mood shifts. - Core themes include prevalence, symptoms, the treatment gap, hormone therapy, long-term health outcomes and emerging research on menopause and cognition. - Each statistic includes a source citation and a date. - The hub is published under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license. - The database draws on automatically updating research feeds from PubMed, ClinicalTrials.gov and openFDA. - Core statistics are verified against primary sources including the World Health Organization and peer-reviewed journals. - The hub updates automatically as new research is published, rather than freezing data in a static report. - kindr Health says the hub reflects both established findings and areas where the science is still evolving.

Between the lines: - The launch targets a clear information gap in women’s health, where menopause data is often fragmented, paywalled or hard to cite. - The company is also elevating a scientific debate: the role of hormone therapy in cognitive outcomes remains under active study. - The framing signals a broader shift in how menopause is discussed, with brain health and long-term chronic disease risk getting more attention. - Public-health context is stark: nearly two-thirds of Alzheimer’s disease patients are women, and more than 60% of people living with Alzheimer’s are postmenopausal women. - More than one billion women worldwide are expected to be postmenopausal by 2030, according to World Health Organization estimates. - Fewer than one in three U.S. OB/GYN residency programs offer a formal menopause curriculum, leaving many clinicians underprepared.

What's next: - The hub will keep updating as new studies, clinical trials and regulatory data are published. - kindr Health is positioning the resource to be used by media, researchers and clinicians as the science evolves. - The company is also offering the Menopause Data Briefing as a companion reference for faster access to the underlying data.

The bottom line: - kindr Health is trying to make menopause data easier to find, easier to trust and easier to cite — while pushing menopause into the broader conversation about brain, bone and heart health.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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