Join the Project Eve Program
Building the Path for Women’s Health
Join us to get clearer answers about your autoimmune condition and menopause with tools built around real life. Project Eve is a free program that helps women understand their symptoms, spot patterns, and get easy-to-use reports as they move through peri-menopause and menopause.
This is a joint project by Cynthia Adinig CEO of CYNAERA and Tracey Welson-Rossman CEO of Journal My Health.

Who Should Apply?
1. Have an autoimmune condition, such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, MS, Hashimoto’s, etc.
2. Are in peri-menopause, menopause, or post-menopause.
3. Are willing to spend a few minutes most days using our secure app to track symptoms.
4. Want research supported reports to bring to your doctor.
5. Are open to giving honest feedback on the experience at least once.
6. Want to connect with other women through shared experiences.
How It Works
1. Complete the form below, on this page.
2. Once selected, download the app link emailed to you.
3. Track your symptoms for a few weeks.
4. Receive a personalized report and 1-on-1 review.
5. Connect with other women with similar diagnoses.
6. Your participation helps build tools to improve care for women globally.
Project Eve Form

Why We Started Project Eve
Project Eve was created because women living with autoimmune illness during midlife have never been fully seen or supported by the healthcare system. The data is scattered. Clinical trials are incomplete. Most tools fail to reflect what our bodies actually go through. Too often, women’s symptoms are dismissed, misunderstood, or left unmeasured, especially when they don’t fit traditional disease models.
We are two women who have worked inside and outside of healthcare. One of us brings experience in research, policy, and patient-led innovation. The other brings decades of expertise in health technology and product development. We have both witnessed how gaps in data and care leave women without answers. We also know this journey personally. We understand what it feels like to manage a complex condition in a body that is changing, while systems around you fail to adapt. Project Eve is our response to that silence. It is not a repackaging of old tools. What we developed is a new, AI-powered system designed to respect immune shifts, hormonal changes, and the real patterns women experience in midlife.
Our goal is simple: to create the global standard for navigating the intersection of chronic illness and menopause. A place where women can track what matters, see patterns doctors often miss, and help shape the future of care through their lived experience.
— Cynthia & Tracey
About Cynthia Adinig
A national health policy advisor, researcher, and Long COVID advocate, Cynthia has been featured in TIME, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, USA Today, and more. She serves on federal health committees, advises major research institutions, and is the founder of CYNAERA, a platform that builds AI tools to repair broken systems, including healthcare. Cynthia is also a patient, mother, and survivor of diagnostic failure who has spent years turning lived experience into structural change.

About Tracey Welson-Rossman
A decades long entrepreneur in health innovation, Tracey is the founder of Journal My Health, a platform that helps patients track complex symptoms and connect with their care teams. She is also a nationally recognized speaker on women in tech, founder of TechGirlz, and a trusted voice on health and patient-centered design. Tracey brings decades of product strategy and community-building to Project Eve, along with her own journey navigating midlife health in a fragmented system.

Why Autoimmune Illness and Menopause Deserve Real Research
Over 11 million women in the U.S. are living at the intersection of autoimmunity and menopause. Many of them have spent years, even decades, managing complex conditions like lupus, multiple sclerosis, Hashimoto’s, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, IBD, and more. As they enter perimenopause or post menopause, their symptoms often intensify or change in unfamiliar ways. Medications that once helped stop working. New sensitivities emerge. Flares last longer and hit harder. Yet not a single one of the top 50 chronic illness drugs we reviewed included full menopause-stage safety testing. Most don’t track hormone phase or separate outcomes by life stage. Women in midlife are being prescribed treatments that were never tested for their current biology.
This is not just a research oversight. It’s a longstanding issue that affects care, outcomes, and quality of life. It costs the U.S. an estimated $75–80 billion a year in avoidable healthcare costs, lost productivity, and long-term disability. But those numbers don’t speak to the emotional cost. The frustration of not being believed. The fear of getting worse with no answers. The pressure to keep going while feeling your body slip out from under you. We’re not outsiders to this experience. We are women who have navigating it firsthand, and who have also worked across healthcare, policy, and technology at the highest levels.
We carry both the personal insight and the professional tools to reimagine what’s possible. Our work is rooted in deep respect for the women who entrust us with their stories. In a time where more women are rightfully questioning how their reproductive and hormonal data is used, we want to be clear. We do not release identities to corporations, agencies, or research institutions. Every insight we build is only to inform better care, never to exploit your trust. Project Eve is not just another AI project. We are reclaiming this missing chapter in women’s health with data, with care, and with the community it should have always had. To the women quietly managing flares, brain fog, bone-deep fatigue, and hormonal shifts that seem to change everything overnight, we see you. You are not invisible, and you are not alone. You are the reason we created Project Eve.
