New Survey Data from Oshi Health Shows Female Patients Have a Striking Overlap Between Digestive and Hormonal Health Conditions

Survey also points to significant gaps in access to coordinated care, with most having already seen a specialist without lasting relief

NEW YORK, May 6, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — In recognition of Women’s Health Month, Oshi Health, a nationwide virtual gastrointestinal (GI) care company, announced the results of a new patient survey that points to an urgent need for awareness around GI care protocols for women as mounting evidence links female hormones and digestive health. The survey found that over half (52%) of female respondents were managing at least one hormonal or reproductive health condition while receiving GI care, and that two-thirds (67%) had already seen a gastroenterologist without finding lasting relief before turning to Oshi for a more comprehensive, whole-body approach to care.

New Survey Data from Oshi Health Shows Female Patients Have a Striking Overlap Between Digestive and Hormonal Health Conditions
Oshi Health patient survey shows striking overlap between digestive conditions and hormonal health

The survey results align with a growing body of peer-reviewed research showing that the gut and the endocrine system are bidirectionally linked and that hormonal fluctuations can directly influence digestive function. Women experience conditions like irritable bowel syndrome at nearly twice the rate of men, yet traditional GI care models rarely account for the hormonal and reproductive health factors that may be contributing to their symptoms. Among respondents with a co-occurring hormonal or reproductive condition, the most common were perimenopause or menopause (26%), pelvic floor dysfunction (11%), PCOS (7%), and endometriosis (6%).

“Women’s digestive health doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s shaped by hormonal fluctuations, pelvic health, stress, and diet, all at once,” said Treta Purohit, MD, a board-certified gastroenterologist, hepatologist, and executive medical director at Oshi Health. “What this survey confirms is something we see every day in practice, that women need a care team who can see the full picture, not just the GI symptoms in isolation. That’s exactly what a multidisciplinary model is designed to do.”

Access to care was also a consistent and important theme across the survey results. Many women reported having explored alternative treatments on their own because access to formal multidisciplinary care integrating nutrition, behavioral health, and GI expertise remains limited, with long wait times and fragmented provider networks leaving many women without coordinated support. In addition to the 67% who had already seen a GI specialist without finding lasting relief, 73% of respondents had changed their diet, and an equal share had tried supplements or over-the-counter medications. More than half (51%) had tried prescription medications.

sammychishti@gmail.com
We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

error: Content is protected !!
gymforcestore
Logo
Shopping cart