Menotracker Founder & CEO Sonja Rincón. Image: Menotracker

Menotracker, an AI-powered menopause tracking app, has launched in partnership with privacy technology company ConsentKeys. The app is available in 177 countries and 41 languages, offering free symptom analysis and educational content.

The company says its integration with ConsentKeys means users’ personal data is never stored. Users are assigned pseudonymous identities, and Menotracker says it cannot access users’ true identities, making it technically impossible to sell, share, or hand over personal health information to third parties. The launch comes as data privacy in women’s health faces heightened scrutiny.

“Women tracking intimate symptoms like incontinence, vaginal dryness, or mental health changes need absolute confidence that their data cannot be accessed by employers, insurance companies, or governments,” said Sonja Rincón, CEO and Founder of Menotracker. “This partnership means we’ve designed our system so that we literally cannot compromise user privacy – because we don’t have access to real user information ourselves.”

Kris Constable, Founder of ConsentKeys, said: “The real user information is encrypted and distributed across multiple jurisdictions in a way that would require years of legal process for anyone – including governments – to even attempt to access.”

Menotracker was developed with over 200 perimenopausal women and certified menopause specialists. The platform tracks symptoms ranging from hot flushes and night sweats to less commonly discussed experiences like word-finding difficulty, and includes visual symptom summaries and doctor-ready reports.

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