
We’ve made remarkable progress in detecting cancer risk. From HPV testing to advanced molecular diagnostics to at-home sampling, the science continues to improve. But outcomes are not determined by detection alone—they are determined by whether patients successfully move through the system of care.

A significant percentage of women are not up to date on recommended screening—not due to lack of awareness, but because of friction in the system.

We often talk about breakthrough technologies as if they don’t yet exist—as though we’re waiting for the next scientific leap to transform women’s health. But what if the truth is both simpler and more urgent? What if the technology already exists… and what’s been missing is access, focus, and execution? Women’s health remains one of…