While hormonal health is increasingly important for women, it affects all genders and is therefore crucial to employee productivity and the overall success of your business.
Signe Svanfeldt is the lead nutritionist at Lifesum, a hugely popular healthy eating platform.
Hormonal health is an issue for all employees, and leaders can support their teams by prioritizing it effectively in the workplace and adopting an open, flexible mindset to manage related issues.
A woman’s hormonal cycle lasts for around four weeks and changes throughout her life stages, which can affect her work performance if not managed effectively.
Lifesum’s US Workplace Wellbeing Trends report found that 40% of Gen Z and Millennial women would leave their current job tomorrow for one that better supports their menstrual cycles. This finding alone should be a major wake-up call for organizations.
And the economic figures are very worrying: a recent US study estimated that menopause costs American women $1.8 billion a year in lost work time, and a recent UK study found that one million women have left work due to menopausal symptoms.
To support today’s diverse workforce, employers need to provide the right support and information to meet women’s changing needs.
Supporting women in the workplace
Employers can effectively support women’s hormonal health by prioritizing educational resources and workshops covering topics such as how nutrition impacts hormonal health, the menstrual cycle, reproductive health and how hormonal fluctuations impact overall health.
Offering a nutrition-first approach empowers employees to make smarter food choices and gain a holistic understanding of how diet impacts hormone balance. Last year, Lifesum became the first company in the world to launch a hormone meal plan that provides personalized health insights, guidance and support, recipes and feedback on macronutrients, and is trusted by the world’s leading organizations to improve employee health outcomes.
Providing nutrition-focused solutions benefits all employees and promotes a healthier, more productive workforce.
How Nutrition Affects Hormonal Health
Nutrition is essential to maintaining and maintaining hormonal health, but the standard American diet, rampant with ultra-processed foods (UPF), excess sodium, saturated fats and refined sugars, poses a major threat to hormone balance.
Without a balanced, nutritious diet that includes the right amounts of complex carbohydrates, lean protein, and healthy fats, your body has a hard time producing and regulating hormones effectively. This imbalance can lead to negative effects like insulin resistance and hormonal fluctuations, which can lead to poor overall performance.

How Hormonal Health Impacts Business Success
Hormonal health affects all genders and is essential to business success as it regulates a variety of bodily functions and influences stress, mental health and productivity – all of which are essential for peak performance.
Hormones act as important messengers that regulate physiological functions such as growth, metabolism, mood and reproductive function. Maintaining hormone balance is essential for optimal bodily performance and overall health. It is important to recognize and address this.
Although progress is being made in understanding mental health in the workplace, there remains a blind spot when it comes to hormone health and nutrition.
Hormonal health has historically been associated with reproductive health and gender stereotypes, but it is being redefined beyond traditional boundaries. Recognizing that many health challenges stem from hormonal and nutritional factors is critical to the overall wellness of your employees.
Breaking the stigma around hormone health
Although hormonal health is a universal concern, certain aspects, such as women’s hormonal health, remain taboo.
Employers must implement strategies to eliminate the stigma surrounding hormone health. By promoting openness and flexibility, employers can prioritize hormone health and lead to happier, more productive employees.
Nutrition programs and educational resources such as healthy eating platforms like Lifesum can provide employees with the knowledge to understand the impact their food choices have on their hormonal health.
This proactive approach contributes to developing a healthier, more informed workforce.
Gen Z and Hormonal Health Support
Understanding the importance of hormonal health and the positive impact of nutrition on workplace outcomes is critical as Gen Z and Millennials make up a large portion of today’s workforce. This demographic is demanding technology-driven initiatives that prioritize inclusivity and overall wellness.
While fertility and family planning benefits remain important, this generation is aware of the impact lifestyle factors like nutrition, exercise and stress have on their hormonal health. Employers need to offer multifaceted hormone support to effectively meet their diverse needs.

Personalized Hormone Health
Individualized and holistic health strategies play a key role in managing hormone health, and these customized interventions are based on an individual’s specific hormone profile and take into account genetic and lifestyle factors.
By holistically addressing lifestyle factors such as nutrition and stress management, these strategies can promote preventive care, empower patients, and minimize the potential for side effects.
Recognizing the symbiotic relationship between physical and mental health, these approaches may promote lasting hormonal balance and improve overall quality of life.
Rethinking Hormonal Health
Innovations in hormone health are reshaping how we approach wellness and fueling a new era of workplace wellness, empowering everyone to live longer, healthier lives.
The rise of functional medicine and preventative care has given individuals the ability to take a closer look at their underlying hormonal health. Moving from reactive to proactive care and monitoring holistic health indicators, including hormone balance, will lay the foundation for long-term health.
Additionally, advances in wearable technology can provide insight into hormonal imbalances that affect sleep quality, appetite, weight, and stress levels.
Employers can help raise awareness and reduce stigma by prioritizing hormone health with an open and flexible approach. A nutrition-first approach is important and can foster a happier, more productive workforce.

