Today’s healthcare systems have been built around data that to a large degree has been shaped and collected by men, leading to systemic blindness in the experiences and needs of women. Knowledge gaps in women’s health have contributed to poor health outcomes for women across the world.
Short Term Objectives:
Long Term Goal:
A three-year programme to generate tangible, systemic change addressing inequalities faced by women through transformative partnerships. Enhance Roche’s reputation as a leading voice in Women’s Health in support of their commitment to transforming healthcare and their mission of doing now what patients need next.
Roche set out to create a campaign to speak to their long-term commitment to women’s health. To create awareness and to stir conversations around health inequity. But, over one year, the campaign has moved far beyond a conversation. It has become a catalyst for a fast-growing community of determined change-makers, and new partners, all working together to close the gaps in female health.
What started as a campaign has become a movement.
This is an ongoing campaign, and currently we have only completed the first phase. This has been the implementation and approach to date: We created our XProject "Hub" — our campaign site. This is where you can find out more about what Roche and partners do to interrogate the knowledge gap and improve women's health. All our campaign efforts drive our audience to this hub.
We started by posting #NotSoFunFacts on social media - a collection of statistics, that makes the issue of the knowledge gap glaringly obvious. Once our facts caught our audience's attention, we then followed up with a powerful film, supported by various cutdowns to explain why the knowledge gap exists, and why there is a need for XProject. It used filmic scenes, speaking to the underlying issues such as a lack of research and funding for women's health, a greater risk of misdiagnosis and longer waiting times for women, as well as the broader issue around men being treated as "the default human". #NotSoFunFacts set the scene, and the film told a bigger story. Our call to action was for women to share their own experiences and stories with us. With the help of local influencers from various countries, we reached a much wider audience of women, and the stories flooded in. Our community shared personal experiences on our social pages, and over 630 women submitted their health stories to the XProject website, where they were shared and published. This helped us to gather new data that reveals and exposes particular areas of repeated misdiagnoses, dismissal and gender inequity, informing disease areas and women-centered care initiatives that we can focus on next.
We are reaching a broad public & new audiences:
We are engaging with our audiences, building momentum & shaping the conversation:
And this is translating into real word action, both internally and with the broader community: