Tap where it hurts, narrow down what it feels like, and walk away with a question worth bringing to your provider. Every anonymous entry lights up the map β proof, in real time, that what women feel is real and shared.
Women's pain is under-researched and too often dismissed. Every voice added here makes it harder to ignore.
β voices on the map
π
β
Loading the numbers women deserve to seeβ¦
Where does it hurt?tap or pick below
β¨ live: β
Tap the body β or use the buttons below
π Tap the body, or choose your area here
Where does it hurt?
Tap the body or pick your area β it lights up as you go
π Your check-in Β· 30 seconds
Step 1 Β· Where
Tap the body to choose a region
Step 2 Β· What it feels like
Step 3 Β· How strong Β· 1 to 10
12345678910
Optional Β· Anything already diagnosed?
Kept on your device to tailor the questions below β never added to the anonymous map.
π¬ Questions worth bringing to your provider
Guidance for your appointment, not a diagnosis β your provider knows your history.
π‘ Bring this to your appointment
General guidance, not a diagnosis β your provider knows your history.
β οΈ Sudden or severe chest pain, pressure, or trouble breathing can be an emergency. If that's happening right now, call 911 or your local emergency number β don't wait.
Anonymous Β· no account needed Β· only the region, sensation, intensity, and ZIP area are stored β never a name, email, or exact location.
Optional Β· kept completely separate from your anonymous log Β· unsubscribe anytime
This was one moment. The free assessment sees the whole picture.
Inside the WOMO app, the free assessment walks through cycle, hormones, energy, sleep, and pain history β and Mae turns it into a picture of where the body stands today. Prevention starts with being seen early, not treated late.
Free to take Β· available now on the App Store and Google Play
π Your local picture
Enter your ZIP above
You are not alone β see it for yourself. Enter a ZIP code and this card shows how many women live in that area and what women nearby are reporting most.
Local population figures: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year estimates.
π Why this matters
1 in 10
women of reproductive age live with endometriosis
~3Γ
higher fibroid rates reported among Black women
Years
the average endometriosis diagnosis is delayed
β‘ Patterns only become visible when women are counted. That's what this map is for.
Sources: World Health Organization; U.S. National Institutes of Health.
π What women are reporting Β· live
Loading live numbersβ¦β
π The Pain Map Β· Live
Watch the world light up.
β reports
Every light is a woman saying: this is real.
The map is just getting started β your entry can be one of its first lights. β¨
Partners Β· Researchers Β· Public Health Programs
This data can move women's health forward. Let's talk.
The Pain Map produces de-identified, aggregate signals on how women experience pain across regions β the kind of community-level insight that public health programs, researchers, and rural health networks need and rarely have. WOMO Health partners with health departments, universities, and community organizations on prevention-first women's health.
ποΈ Public health programs
Aggregate regional pain-signal reporting to support community health assessments, Title V priorities, and rural health initiatives.
π¬ Researchers & universities
De-identified datasets on self-reported pain patterns in women β always aggregate, never individual, never sold.
π Community organizations
Wellness programming, health education workshops, and screening-awareness campaigns built with and for local women.