Published on 25th May 2026
This insights post is a summary of the blog post published by RH Strategic. View the full article at: How Women’s Health Companies Can Use PR to Drive Adoption and Trust.
Women’s health innovation, often referred to as femtech, has evolved from a niche category into one of the most significant growth opportunities in healthcare. In the U.S., women drive the majority of healthcare decisions and spending, yet women’s health remains one of the most undercapitalized areas in the system, receiving only 6% of private healthcare investment.
This gap creates structural inefficiency in how care is funded, delivered, and measured. Women’s health companies must not only compete for limited investment but also overcome education gaps before they can drive adoption. In today’s market, the challenge isn’t awareness—it’s adoption, which requires a fundamentally different approach to public relations.
Women’s health companies sit at the intersection of cultural stigma, clinical validation, regulatory complexity, and deeply personal experiences. As the industry moves beyond supporting specific stages in a woman’s lifecycle, innovators need to rethink how they communicate the interconnectedness of these moments.
Companies are not just marketing products; they are positioning how they fit across a patient’s care journey over time. This requires a strategic communications approach that addresses multiple stakeholders with competing priorities: patients seeking solutions, providers evaluating clinical fit, and payers assessing cost and scalability.
PR in the women’s health sector is no longer about telling stories—it’s about helping the right stakeholders understand, trust, and adopt what companies have built. This requires moving beyond awareness campaigns to strategic communications that address the specific needs and concerns of patients, providers, and payers simultaneously.
Companies that successfully navigate these complexities position themselves not as niche players but as essential partners in closing a critical gap in the U.S. healthcare system. The opportunity is significant, but success requires a PR approach as innovative as the products themselves.
To get more insights and details on this topic, read the full post at: How Women’s Health Companies Can Use PR to Drive Adoption and Trust.
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