Melinda French Gates donates $215 million to improve women's health
worldwide
[June 04, 2026]
By GLENN GAMBOA
Philanthropist Melinda French Gates will expand her giving to improve
women’s health globally, pledging another $215 million to support
contraceptive access and maternal care, as well as initiatives aimed at
middle-aged women, including further study of menopause.
The new funding announced Thursday pushes French Gates’ donations for
women’s health over $600 million in the past two years.
French Gates told The Associated Press in an interview that women’s
health is the cornerstone of the work she does through Pivotal, the
group of organizations she founded to handle her philanthropy and
investments. “It’s just blaringly obvious that women’s health is
fundamental — she has to be well to do well in life,” French Gates said.
Since 2024, when she stepped away from The Gates Foundation, which she
founded with her now ex-husband Bill Gates and built into one of the
world’s largest private funders of health care, French Gates has honed
her approach to supporting women.

This latest round of funding reflects an increasingly strategic approach
to areas she feels are underfunded. It includes a $40 million donation
to Co-Impact for an initiative that embeds mental health support into
maternal and primary care, especially in Africa. And French Gates hopes
her $10 million donation to the Menopause Society to improve menopause
care in the United States, by educating healthcare practitioners and
expanding outreach in areas where care is limited, will encourage other
funders to begin working on the issue.
According to the World Economic Forum, even though women make up half
the population, the health issues that specifically affect them only get
2% of private healthcare funds. The lack of funding has resulted in a
lack of products and services dedicated to treating them.
“The role of philanthropy, in my opinion, is to look at some of these
societal problems that have been left behind, and shine light on them,
show ways of making progress so you can then crowd in other donors and
ultimately crowd in government funding,” she said. “Part of what I’m
doing here, I hope, is sending a signal to say, ‘This is really
important. Let’s do something about it.’ And my hope is that I’ll be
able to get others who will join me.”
[to top of second column]
|
 Dr. Stephanie Faubion, medical
director of The Menopause Society and director of The Mayo Clinic’s
Center for Women’s Health, said the United States currently has
about 6,000 counties where patients have critically low access to
menopause-competent clinicians. She said the donation will allow The
Menopause Society to offer its educational resources to more areas
of the country that need them.
“Menopause remains one of the most overlooked and
underserved areas in medicine, and The Menopause Society believes
women deserve better,” Faubion said. “We’re ready to make those
changes with the support of donors like Pivotal.”
Research into menopause treatments was already underfunded, even
before recent medical research cuts made by President Donald Trump’s
administration went into effect, Faubion said.
“I think philanthropy is going to fill a greater role than it ever
has in the past because we are just not going to have the same type
of government funding that we’ve had before,” she said. “Funding is
hard to come by these days – much, much harder than it was before.
And the need hasn’t gotten away. We still have to do the research
somehow.”
Faubion said the substantial size of French Gates’ gift is
important, but the attention it brings may be even more crucial.
“It shows that somebody like Melinda Gates and Pivotal feel that
this is an important issue,” Faubion said. “It will illuminate the
gaps that are still there… and it makes people not only aware, but
maybe motivated to take some action.”
For French Gates, bringing more attention to these women’s issues is
nearly as important as increasing the funding for them.
“I want women’s health issues to not be invisible,” she said. “I
don’t want the default to be that women are expected to deal with
pain and suffering. I want them to be seen for what they’re going
through, their real life experiences, and have those issues
addressed so they can live their very best lives."
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |