Medical Devices, Technology, Women's Health / 29.05.2026

[caption id="attachment_74022" align="aligncenter" width="500"]women's-health-trackers.jpg Photo by Ketut Subiyanto[/caption] Women's health technology has come a long way from basic period tracking apps. Today, a new generation of devices and platforms is giving women access to the kind of hormone data that used to require a doctor's appointment, a lab order, and a two-week wait for results. From continuous glucose monitors to AI-powered saliva analyzers, the tools of 2026 are helping women understand what's actually happening inside their bodies - in real time, at home, on their own terms. Whether you're trying to conceive, managing PCOS, navigating perimenopause, or simply wanting a clearer picture of your metabolic health, there's now a tracker built for your specific journey. We've rounded up three of the most compelling options on the market this year.
OBGYNE / 28.05.2026

[caption id="attachment_74016" align="aligncenter" width="500"]surrogacy-ukraine-program.jpg Photo by freestocks.org[/caption] Most people researching surrogacy expect the hard part to be finding a surrogate. It isn't. The hard part is everything that comes after — the waiting, the legal maze, the emotional whiplash that nobody includes in the brochure. Ukraine has become one of the more serious destinations for intended parents in recent years — and for a specific reason. It's among the few countries where gestational surrogacy is explicitly legal, and where the intended parents are named on the birth certificate from day one. That's not a small detail; it eliminates an entire layer of post-birth legal exposure that families face in other jurisdictions. For anyone weighing options, working with an established surrogacy agency Ukraine means operating inside a framework that actually protects you — not around one that merely tolerates you. What draws most families toward surrogacy in Ukraine isn't just the legal clarity, though. It's the combination of cost, medical infrastructure, and program structure that's hard to find elsewhere at the same level. That part gets covered in the research phase. What doesn't get covered — what almost nobody prepares you for — is almost everything else.
OBGYNE / 11.05.2026

MedicalResearch.com Interview with: [caption id="attachment_73653" align="alignleft" width="150"]Bailey MilnePhD Graduate Student | Epidemiology
Queen's University | Department of Public Health Sciences
Kingston, ON Bailey Milne[/caption] Bailey Milne PhD Graduate Student | Epidemiology Queen's University | Department of Public Health Sciences Kingston, ON A large population-based study using health administrative data from Ontario examines whether endometriosis is associated with an increased risk of congenital anomalies in offspring — with findings that suggest increased monitoring may be warranted for affected pregnancies.
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? The study was conducted using health administrative data in Ontario. The data was from 2006 to 2021, which resulted in over 1.4 million mother-baby pairs. Endometriosis is an inflammatory condition where the uterine lining grows outside of the uterus, which can result in painful menstruation, intercourse and bowel movements. Roughly 10% of reproductive aged patients have endometriosis, and of those, 30–60% have infertility.