Sophia Yen is a woman with a mission: to make it as easy as possible to prevent unplanned pregnancies by making prescription contraceptives available online.
A year ago Yen, along with a pharmacist and three others, cofounded Pandia Health, a Web-based service that automatically sends refills of three different types of prescription birth control: the pill, ring, or patch. The service also provides prescriptions if needed, with no required in-person medical encounter. Patients must fill out a detailed health questionnaire and submit a blood pressure reading taken at a doctor’s office, ER visit, or local pharmacy or grocery store within the past 365 days.
Yen calls this effort “almost a culmination of my life’s work,” noting that she has been interested in medicine since childhood. She earned an SB in biology from MIT, where she found a mentor in former MIT Medical pediatrician Mark Goldstein. She also participated in what was known as “a contraceptive road show,” visiting MIT’s living groups to share information about birth control. After MIT, she earned an MD from UC San Francisco and a master’s degree in public health from UC Berkeley. She is now a clinical associate professor of pediatrics at Stanford Medical School but devotes much of her time to Pandia Health.
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