Somi Javaid was 21 years old when her mother almost died from an undiagnosed disease. Today, her company has raised millions to fill in the care gap

Dr. Somi Javaid is the founder of HerMD which provides in-person and virtual care focused on women’s health.

Jun 8, 2025 - 13:08
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Somi Javaid was 21 years old when her mother almost died from an undiagnosed disease. Today, her company has raised millions to fill in the care gap
  • Dr. Somi Javaid dedicated her life and her career to improving women’s health after her mom was diagnosed with a cardiovascular condition. Javaid is now the founder of HerMD, which focuses on treating women in areas such as gynecology, sexual health, and menopause.

When a health scare affected her mother, Dr. Somi Javaid knew that she would dedicate her career to improving women’s health.

While her mom’s health condition improved, she could have died because of undiagnosed cardiovascular disease. At the time, Javaid made a promise to herself that she would not let what happened to her mom happen to others. 

“I was pre-med at Northwestern at the time, 21 years old, and made a promise to her and to myself that this was never going to happen again and that I was going to change the world,” she said.

Fast forward to today and Javaid is an expert on women’s healthcare. She’s also the founder of HerMD, which helps connect patients and doctors for in-person and virtual consultations on gynecology, sexual health, menopause, and other areas. HerMD most recently secured an additional $8 million in Series A funding last year, bringing its total funding to over $36 million.

Speaking at the Fortune Most Powerful Women conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Javaid told attendees that more information about women’s health is needed in the medical field, especially when it comes to menopause and postmenopause. 

“Menopause affects us from head to toe, undiagnosed, untreated menopause led to, just in the United States, $1.8 billion losses in work,” she said.

While menopause affects a billion people, most doctors are not trained appropriately to address health issues for people in this stage of life. Javaid highlighted that with the proper care, women need not make drastic changes to their lives because of menopause. 

When it comes to other medical conditions, such as the cardiovascular disease that affected her mother, more resources and education are still needed, Javaid added. 

“We were treating women in the United States like little men,” she said. “So that’s why my mother almost died. Cardiovascular disease remains the number one killer of women in the United States.”

Companies such as HerMD are filling this gap in care, Javaid said. The company will soon train medical providers across the country especially on postmenopause and has expanded its virtual care to reach women across the country.

“Women live longer than men, but we live those years in much poorer health. And so if we can integrate hormonal health and understand our ovaries much better, it’s a key to longevity, and not just living longer, but living those years healthier,” Javaid said.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com