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Twentyeight Health Partners with Oura to Link Wearable Data to Contraceptive Care

Twentyeight Health Partners with Oura to Link Wearable Data to Contraceptive Care

New updates have been reported about Twentyeight Health.

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Twentyeight Health has entered a strategic partnership with Oura to integrate data from the Oura Ring into its provider-led digital women’s health platform, positioning the company at the center of a data-driven contraceptive care model. Oura members can now opt to share sleep, cycle, temperature, and symptom metrics directly with Twentyeight’s nationwide network of licensed clinicians, enabling more tailored contraceptive counseling and birth control prescriptions based on real-world biometric and symptom patterns.

The integration expands Twentyeight Health’s Complete Care model, an insurance-enabled clinical infrastructure that already supports more than 100,000 users and connects over 500 commercial and Medicaid insurance partners, with coverage expected to reach about 50 million women by year-end. The membership, priced at $19.99 per month for self-pay users and often available at a low or zero copay for in-network members, is designed to convert continuous wearable insights into clinical decisions, particularly for women with irregular cycles, heavy or painful periods, mood changes, acne, or other cycle-related concerns.

CEO and Co-Founder Bruno Van Tuykom framed the partnership as a bridge between passive tracking and actionable care, emphasizing that many women collect extensive health data without a straightforward path to clinical intervention. By aligning Oura’s Cycle Insights with Twentyeight’s telemedicine services, the company aims to improve contraceptive selection, adherence, and overall cycle management, potentially reducing trial-and-error in birth control decisions and enhancing satisfaction and retention within its membership base.

The platform remains fully HIPAA-compliant, and all data sharing is strictly opt-in, mitigating privacy risk while supporting deeper engagement in digital health. For Twentyeight Health, the move reinforces its positioning as a core infrastructure partner for digital health ecosystems that need scalable, provider-led women’s healthcare, and could expand referral volume, prescription activity, and recurring revenue as more wearable users seek integrated contraceptive and general women’s health services. The collaboration also strengthens Twentyeight’s differentiation against other virtual care offerings by tying its clinical model to continuous biometric streams.

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