Book Dr. Tracy
Speaking Engagements
Gynecologist • Speaker • Co-Founder, Menopolooza
Dr. Tracy Rodgers is a sought-after speaker on menopause, midlife women’s health, and the systemic gaps that continue to normalize women’s suffering. With decades of clinical experience as a gynecologist, Tracy brings rigorous medical science, and pairs it with something audiences rarely expect from a physician: sharp wit, candour, and genuinely laugh-out-loud humour.
Her talks are evidence-informed, deeply human, and highly engaging. Tracy has a rare ability to translate complex medical concepts into language that is clear, relatable, and memorable, while keeping audiences fully awake, leaning forward, and laughing along the way. Whether speaking to clinicians, corporate leaders, or community audiences, she is known for creating moments of recognition, relief, and meaningful insight.
At the heart of Tracy’s work is a commitment to validating women’s lived experience, challenging outdated narratives, and offering care models rooted in both data and dignity. As co-founder of Menopolooza, she is helping reshape menopause education and midlife care through truth-telling, community, and accessible expertise.
Speaking Topics (Samples)
Menopause Is Not a Personal Failure
Why women’s suffering has been normalized: and what evidence-informed care should actually look like.
Bridging medical science, lived experience, and trust in midlife healthcare.
The Cost of Dismissing Women’s Health
How untreated midlife health impacts workplaces, leadership, and retention.
Self-Compassion Is a Clinical Intervention
Why education without dignity doesn’t work, and what does.
What Happens When Women Are Finally Believed
Lessons from Menopolooza on community-based health education and change.
Previous Engagements
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Speaking Style
Evidence-based Candid Engaging Relatable Hilarious (yes, really)
Ideal Audiences
Medical and health conferences
Corporate wellness & leadership events
Corporate wellness & leadership events
Spotlights less obvious symptoms—like joint pain, hair loss, heart palpitations, and urinary changes—and why they warrant medical attention.
Learn more on UCLA Health’s site