Two sciences.
One patient.
The menopause transition is one of the highest-risk windows in a woman's life for changes in mood, anxiety, sleep, and thinking. Yet the body and the mind are kept on opposite sides of the chart. Severson Health is an evidence-led practice, in development, built to read them together.
A line that rises through the reproductive years, then falls across perimenopause.
Estrogen does not decline on a smooth slope. It swings, then drops. The steepest part of that fall is also where the risk of mood and cognitive symptoms climbs the highest.
Lay the two curves over one another and the argument is plain: the body's transition and the mind's vulnerability are not separate events. They share a window.
The intersection is a clinical no-man's-land.
02 / The gap in trainingGynecology
Fluent in the hormones.
- A1Reads the menopause transition, the formulations, the timing.trains lightly on psychiatric medication
- A2Manages the body's symptoms with confidence.defers the mood symptoms onward
Psychiatry
Fluent in the mind.
- B1Reads the depression, the anxiety, the cognitive change.trains lightly on hormones
- B2Treats the symptom, rarely asks where the cycle is.misses the hormonal timing
A physician fluent in both sides can stand exactly where the two disciplines stop. The thesis of Severson Health is simple: read the hormonal change and the mental-health picture as a single clinical story, in the one window where it matters most.
A generation was taught to fear hormone therapy. The fear was too broad.
The Women's Health Initiative era left many physicians reflexively wary of hormone therapy. But the original findings came from an older cohort, years past menopause, and a single formulation, then were over-generalized to younger, perimenopausal women.
The timing hypothesis and newer formulations have reopened the field. Demand is surging. The mental-health arm of menopause care is still wide open.
An evidence-led venture built on one habit: read the research, daily.
Hormones and mind, together
The transition and the mental-health picture assessed as one clinical story, not handed between two clinics.
Evidence, kept current
A daily research engine on the menopause and mental-health literature keeps the practice anchored to what the data now says.
Care at the intersection
Care designed for the women who fall between specialties, with the window itself read as the diagnosis it deserves to be.