Wellness, clearly explained

The health conversation women have been waiting for.

Ajimase is a quiet library of evidence-led articles on the topics that shape women's health — written and medically reviewed by UK-registered clinicians.

Clinician-reviewed
Woman in an elegant ivory gown standing freely in a wildflower field by the ocean at golden hour
01
Written by clinicians

Every article is authored or medically reviewed by a UK-registered doctor before publication.

02
Educational, not prescriptive

We explain symptoms, science and questions to ask — never a personalised diagnosis.

03
Women-first, always

From perimenopause to pelvic health, we cover what mainstream medicine often skims over.

Our approach

Honest information, written like a friend who happens to be a doctor.

We don't sell tests. We don't sell supplements. We don't claim to diagnose. We write the clearest possible explanations of the science — what your body does, what symptoms can mean, and the questions worth bringing to your own clinician.

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19pillars

The areas of women's health we cover

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When it starts to matter

Your decade decides which questions get loud.

This map plots the nineteen pillars against the decades of a woman's life. The darker the square, the more often that topic walks into our inbox at that age. Use it to find what's worth reading first — and what's worth bookmarking for later.

Filter by decade
Choose a decade above to reveal the map.

Numbers reflect editorial frequency in women's health practice, not individual risk. Use this as a prompt — then read the topic, then talk to your clinician.

Source · Ajimase editorial team, drawing on UK women's health guidance from the National Health Service (NHS), Breast Cancer Now, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG), and the British Menopause Society (BMS). Intensity scores are indicative, not epidemiological.

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Educational only. Patterns vary by individual, family history and clinical context — use this map as a prompt for conversations with your own clinician.

From the library

Recent reading

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A note from us

"Ajimase is health education, not a clinic. If something in your body is asking for attention, please ask a clinician who knows you."