PeriNavigatHer™

"Am I too young for perimenopause?""Is anxiety normal during perimenopause?" "Why am I gaining weight?" "I'm 45; what should I expect to experience when I begin perimenopause?" "What should I ask my doctor about my perimenopause symptoms?" "What is the latest on hormone therapy?"
Smart Search: A PeriMenopause-Specific Answer Engine (Beta)
When you submit your question, you will receive:
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A concise, guideline-based answer.
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A 7- and 30-day plan.
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Personalized questions for your provider.
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A comprehensive answer for those who like data.
Most women say they were never taught what to expect in menopause, and two‑thirds or more feel unprepared when symptoms start; left to sort through confusing, conflicting information online instead of getting clear, trustworthy answers they can use with their doctors.
PeriNavigatHer™ is an AI‑powered, evidence-based answer engine designed by women's health practitioners to give you fast, reliable answers with clear, concrete next steps you can use with your own clinician (whether they know a lot about perimenopause or not).
How Does The PeriNavigatHer
Smart Search Work?
PeriMenopause-Specific Answer Engine (Free In Beta Testing)
Step 1
Submit any questions related to peri-menopause, menopause, symptoms, treatments, lifestyle strategies, or long‑term health.
Step 2
Receive a structure, evidence-based report, including a concise overview, realistic next steps, a tracker and planning tools, topic-specific guides addressing lifestyle modifications (where appropriate), and questions that are designed to optimize your next appointment with your provider.
Step 3
​Review your report and bring your personalized questions to your next appointment and/or use the report to populate your PeriMenopause Appointment Prep Kit.


How is the
PeriNavigatHer Smart Search
Different From Other AI?
Traditional Search Engines:
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Return thousands of conflicting results
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Mix evidence-based sources that include blogs, Reddit, and social media
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Require you to evaluate credibility yourself
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Provide fragments across multiple sites
PeriNavigatHer™:
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Built specifically for perimenopause: The system is trained and constrained around hundreds of menopause‑focused sources, including guidelines and research (NAMS, IMS, Endocrine Society, ACOG), not broad internet content.
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Structured answers: Every response uses the same tested framework: concise overview, next steps, provider questions, resources, and evidence summary.
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Action-oriented: The system helps translate the information into visit summaries, questions, and scripts you can use with any provider. Responses emphasize concrete process steps: tracking, preparing questions, and understanding options (individual safety and prescribing decisions are always left to the clinician).
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Honest about limits: If a question cannot be answered by the engine (for example, fertility planning or non‑menopause conditions) or requires individualized clinical judgment, you will receive suggested questions for your provider as well as a copy-and-paste prompt you can use with a general AI tool.
The Evidence-Based Approach
The PeriNavigatHer ecosystem is built from hand‑selected, evidence‑based resources, including clinical practice guidelines, consensus statements, and high‑quality studies such as randomized trials, cohort studies, meta‑analyses, and systematic reviews.
The system draws only on materials from leading menopause societies and major medical journals, many of which are typically behind paywalls or require professional memberships or institutional access.
Primary
Sources
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Clinical practice guidelines from the North American Menopause Society (NAMS)
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International Menopause Society (IMS) recommendations
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American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) guidelines
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The Endocrine Society clinical practice guidelines
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International guidelines where appropriate (e.g., British Menopause Society [BMS])
Supporting
Research
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Peer-reviewed studies from major medical journals
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Large-scale clinical trials
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Systematic reviews and meta-analyses
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Government health resources (NIH, Office on Women's Health)
Quality
Standards
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Evidence is prioritized by strength: clinical guidelines first, then randomized controlled trials, then observational studies, meta-analyses and so on
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When evidence is limited or conflicting, this is clearly stated; established research vs. professional opinion is noted
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Information is updated as new guidelines and research are published
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All claims are cited so you can verify the source