Society · For the public

Ask the question women's health research should answer.

You are here because you need clarity. Women's health is full of confident claims, conflicting advice and unanswered questions. SCITED collects the questions people are asking, identifies the patterns and feeds back what those questions reveal through SCITED Briefs. At first, that means showing where attention is clustering, where evidence looks thin and where expertise is missing. As SCITED grows, those Briefs become structured intelligence on women's health priorities and, in time, fuller evidence reviews.

§ 01 · Lived experience

The questions people carry matter.

Lived experience is often where the question starts. When people ask the same questions, describe the same confusion, or keep running into the same gaps, that matters. SCITED uses those questions to identify what women's health needs to understand better, explain better, study better and take more seriously.

SCITED's Society route is not a forum, chatbot or medical advice service. It is a way for public questions to become visible as demand, so the questions women are already carrying can help shape future SCITED Briefs, research asks and evidence gaps.

§ 02 · Ask

One question. No personal details.

SCITED's Society route is not a chatbot and does not return individual replies or personal medical advice. Repeated public questions are clustered, routed into SCITED and used to shape SCITED Briefs.

What's your burning question about women's health?

Please do not include your name, contact details or information that could identify you or someone else. SCITED does not give personal medical advice or individual replies.

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§ 03 · What happens next

Your question becomes part of a pattern.

Thank you for submitting your question. SCITED does not provide individual replies or personal medical advice. Questions are reviewed together to identify repeated themes, patterns and gaps in women's health knowledge, evidence and understanding.

When the same questions keep appearing, that demand helps shape future SCITED work. It can show where clearer public explanation is needed, where evidence looks thin, where expertise is missing, and where research, funding or systems may need to look next.