Periagoge
Concept
2 min readself knowledge

What Data Privacy Means When You Share Health Data With AI Tools

Sharing menstrual and reproductive data with AI tools means understanding what happens to your information—how it's stored, who can access it, whether it's sold or used for training, and how long it's retained. Privacy matters with sensitive health data, so knowing these details lets you make informed choices about which tools to trust.

Hypatia
Why It Matters

Think of health data privacy like the difference between keeping a diary locked in your house versus posting it on the internet. Both are "stored somewhere," but the security and who can access it is vastly different.

When you log menstrual and health data into any app—AI-powered or not—that information exists somewhere. Understanding where and who can see it matters.

Common misunderstandings about health data:

Myth 1: "If the app is free, they're selling my data."

Reality: Some free apps do sell anonymized data, some don't. It depends on the business model. Some free apps are actually funded by health organizations and genuinely don't monetize your data. You have to check each app's privacy policy.

Myth 2: "If I'm using an AI tool, my data is less private."

Reality: The AI being smart doesn't change privacy. What matters is the company's practices. A privacy-respecting AI app is safer than a data-harvesting non-AI app.

What actually affects your privacy:

  • Data encryption: Is your data encrypted in transit (traveling to servers) and at rest (sitting on servers)? Good privacy practices = yes to both
  • Data retention: How long does the company keep your data? Can you delete it? Some companies delete when you ask; others keep historical data indefinitely
  • Third-party sharing: Does the company share your data with other companies, advertisers, or researchers? Under what circumstances?
  • Company location: Where are the servers? Different countries have different privacy laws (GDPR in Europe is stricter than US laws)
  • Anonymization: If data is shared for research, is it truly anonymized (unidentifiable) or just de-identified (could be re-identified)?

For women's health specifically, period data is extra sensitive because it can reveal fertility status, sexual activity, medications, and health conditions. It's worth being more protective of this data than, say, your step count.

Here's what you can actually do: before using any app, read the privacy policy (I know, tedious). Look specifically for: "What data do you collect?" "Who do you share it with?" "Can I delete my data?" "Do you sell anonymized data?" If you can't find clear answers, that's a red flag.

Try this: Look up the privacy policy for your current cycle-tracking app (or start with Clue or Flo). Search for three things: "third party," "share," and "delete." In 5 minutes you'll know if your period data is being shared with advertisers or used in research.

Helpful guides
Hypatia
Daily Life & Decisions
Related Concepts
Peri
Questions about What Data Privacy Means When You Share Health Data With AI Tools?

Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.

Ready to work on What Data Privacy Means When You Share Health Data With AI Tools?

Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.