We spend most of our lives focusing on how not to get pregnant. In Conception 101, we flip the script and break down the biological basics of how to get pregnant.
✔️Everything you didn't learn in sex ed
✔️Written by doctors and scientists
✔️Practical tools and tips to get pregnant
✔️Prepare your body, mind, and life to have a baby
Dr. Nazaneen Homaifar is an obstetrician and gynecologist. She earned her medical degree from the Duke University School of Medicine and her MBA from Harvard Business School. She completed a residency in obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at UCSF. She is a member of ACOG. Dr. Naz is the co-founder and Chief Medical Advisor of Natalist. She enjoys guiding patients through their pregnancies, counseling patients on family planning, providing contraception and treating menstrual irregularities, fibroids, endometriosis, urinary incontinence, gender dysphoria and pelvic pain. She also performs minimally invasive surgery and abdominal surgery for a variety of gynecological conditions.
Dr. Elizabeth Kane earned her Ph.D. in Biological and Biomedical Sciences from Harvard University and her BA in Biology from New York University. She is the co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of Natalist, where she heads up product development and R&D. She develops new products and educational content that serve people at an important time in their lives--when they are creating a family. Her background at the bench informs her evidence-first product development philosophy. Before coming to Natalist, she was a Junior Fellow at The Rowland Institute at Harvard, where she was studied the neural mechanisms underlying innate behaviors in fruit fly larvae.
Halle Tecco has an MBA from Harvard Business School and is currently pursuing her MPH from Johns Hopkins. She is an advisor to the Harvard Medical School Department of Biomedical Informatics and Boston Children's Hospital. Halle is currently co-founder & CEO of Natalist. Previously she was the founder of early-stage digital health venture fund Rock Health, and an Adjunct Professor at Columbia Business School. Halle has appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and CNBC. She was named as one of Goldman Sach's Most Intriguing Entrepreneurs and listed on the Forbes 30 under 30.