02/06/2026
By the time a product enters someone’s body, bedroom, bathroom, clinic, or daily routine, the design challenge is no longer just technical. It becomes emotional, ethical, and relational, because the product is asking someone to trust it with information, sensations, patterns, fears, habits, and decisions that may feel deeply personal.
That is what interests me most in femtech hardware: not only whether a device works, but what kind of relationship it creates with the person using it. What does it ask them to notice? What does it ask them to reveal? What does it ask them to track, interpret, trust, or change about their life?
I’m exploring these questions while writing Designing Femtech, my upcoming book on femtech hardware, meaningful technology, and the future of women’s health.
Follow along on Substack: designingfemtech.com