The Data’s in Her Hands: How Women Are Using Tech to Take Control of Their Health, Hormones and Stress

For too long, women have been expected to manage their health based on intuition, one-size-fits-all guidelines, or advice built on research that didn’t include us. In fact, only 3% of medical research has focused exclusively on women – despite the very real and well-documented differences in how we experience hormones, stress, pain, and recovery.

The truth is, women are not little men. Our biology is beautifully complex – and it deserves tools and strategies tailored to us. That gap is finally starting to close. Not through the health care system, but through the rise of wearable tech and personalised health data that women can access for themselves.

From smart rings and trackers to hormone-monitoring apps and recovery tools, women are now equipped with insights once reserved for elite athletes or medical labs. And the impact of biohacks for women is powerful: we’re seeing a global movement of women redefining health and performance. On their own terms.

Why women need their own data

Research shows that women respond differently to stress than men. We’re more likely to experience cortisol fluctuations, disrupted sleep, and burnout. Especially, when we push through without acknowledging our cycle or recovery needs. Until recently, that data just wasn’t available.

Tech that understands women’s biology

Today, wearables like WHOOP’s new 5.0 are finally bridging the gender data gap. Their Menstrual Cycle Insights, Pregnancy Tracking, and newly released Healthspan feature are designed to help women understand key biometrics like heart rate variability (HRV), resting heart rate (RHR), and sleep quality – and how these fluctuate across the menstrual cycle or major life phases.

A landmark WHOOP study tracked over 1.2 million days of biometric data from 11,000 women, revealing clear, predictable physiological shifts tied to the menstrual cycle. The takeaway? Our hormones aren’t mysterious. They’re measurable – and optimisable.

Stress, cortisol and the female burnout factor

As mentioned, women are more susceptible to cortisol dysregulation, with research showing we’re more prone to stress-related burnout. Especially when we ignore the natural rise and fall of our energy across the month. By tracking data like HRV and recovery scores, women can now choose when to push, when to pause, and how to best support their nervous system through biofeedback and cycle-aware training.

It’s not about doing less.  It’s about doing things smarter – with your biology in mind.

The biohacking revolution, designed for her

In my upcoming book BIOHACK ME – launching this month – I’ve dedicated a chapter to Biohacking for Women. The content is all about exploring how women of all ages can optimise their energy, hormones, performance and longevity. Whether you’re in your reproductive years, navigating perimenopause, or embracing postmenopause, the way we support our bodies through data and daily habits matters.

Biohacking isn’t just about fancy gadgets or elite labs. It’s about understanding your nervous system, your stress response, and your hormonal rhythm. And, working with it, not against it.

Accessible biohacks for everyday women

In BIOHACK ME, I break down the most effective, accessible biohacks for women at every age and stage. But, here’s a preview of what’s already making a difference:

Essential biohacks for women

Tailored to hormones, stress resilience, energy and longevity

  1. Track your cycle
    Use wearables or apps to understand your hormonal phases and adjust your movement, nutrition, and recovery accordingly. It’s the foundation of personalised health for women.
  2. Strength training
    One of the most important and often overlooked tools for female health. Supports lean muscle mass, bone density, insulin sensitivity, mood and metabolism. Women over 35 especially benefit from 2–3 strength sessions a week, adapted to their cycle.
  3. Seed cycling
    A natural food-based approach to supporting hormonal balance. Typically involves flaxseed and pumpkin in the follicular phase, and sesame and sunflower in the luteal phase. Gentle, accessible, and easy to add into smoothies or meals.
  4. Adaptogens for stress
    Herbs like ashwagandha, rhodiola, and holy basil support the HPA axis and help regulate cortisol. They are particularly useful in the second half of the cycle or during perimenopause.
  5. Cold exposure and vagus nerve activation
    Short cold showers, facial plunges, or breathwork practices like humming or chanting stimulate the vagus nerve and help regulate the nervous system. Great for reducing inflammation, supporting mood and building resilience.
  6. Morning light exposure
    Getting natural sunlight within an hour of waking helps reset the circadian rhythm, regulate cortisol and improve energy and focus for the day ahead.
  7. Prioritising sleep recovery
    Hormonal fluctuations across the cycle can affect sleep quality. Tracking sleep helps identify patterns and tailor habits to support deeper rest, particularly in the luteal phase and during perimenopause.
  8. Tracking biological age
    Tools like WHOOP’s Healthspan feature or lab-based biological age testing can give insight into how your lifestyle is impacting your longevity and health span. A powerful motivator for long-term behaviour change.
  9. Nervous system regulation
    Practices like yin yoga, restorative movement, yoga nidra, or even creative play and laughter can support emotional regulation and nervous system health. These are especially important during times of hormonal change or life transitions.
  10. Protein and blood sugar support
    Many women are under-eating protein and struggling with blood sugar crashes. Prioritising 30 grams of protein per meal, and balancing it with healthy fats and fibre, supports hormone production, satiety and metabolic health.

The Future of Women’s Health Is Personalised

We’re stepping into an era where women can biohack their health without needing permission, guesswork, or a GP referral. The data is available. The tech is in your hands. And the more you track, the more you learn what works for you – not some average male model.

It’s not about obsessing over numbers or chasing perfection. Nor is it about building a relationship with your body that’s based on insight, not intuition alone. Instead, it’s about feeling empowered to work with your hormones, your stress levels, your biology – so you can show up better in every area of your life.

You can buy the book here.

Whether you’re in your 20s, juggling your 30s, or navigating perimenopause, this movement is for you. Because finally, the data is in her hands – and that changes everything. BIOHACK ME will be available in all good bookstores and online from May 28th. Pre-order and sale available now on Amazon.

Camilla Thompson: Camilla Thompson is an Australian author, nutritionist, executive coach and biohacker with over a decade of experience in integrative health and wellbeing. Founder of The Wellness Coach, BioHackMe and MouldSafe, Camilla blends evidence-based nutrition, behaviour change science and biohacking to help individuals and organisations thrive. A sought-after keynote speaker and media contributor, she has been featured in The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Women’s Health, and on Sunrise TV. Passionate about longevity, personalised and preventative health, resilience and performance, Camilla brings a science-meets-lifestyle approach to coaching, writing and corporate wellbeing.

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