We are delighted to announce that the Menstruation Research Conference this year will be co-hosted by 4M (Menarche, Menstruation, Menopause & Mental Health) Consortium and the Menstruation Research Network (MRN) at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, on the 7th and 8th July 2026.

We look forward to bringing together researchers, clinicians, industry partners, policymakers, charities, artists, and community voices. The conference will explore menstruation as a psychosocial, biomedical and environmental experience across the life course.
This event builds on the success of previous MRN and 4M conferences. Previous events have sold out and drawn wide interdisciplinary engagement, which reflects our shared commitment to fostering collaborative, inclusive, and impactful menstrual health research.
We will be sharing more information about the conference on this page as it’s available
Key dates
Abstract submission open 11th December 2025
Abstract submission closes 5th March 2026
Abstract acceptance by 1st May 2026
Registration opens (TBC)
Conference dates: 7th & 8th July 2026
Conference Themes
The 2026 Menstruation Research Conference centres around three core thematic areas, each reflecting our shared focus on interdisciplinarity, wellbeing, and the psychosocial, biomedical and environmental contexts of menstrual health.
Menstrual Health & Wellbeing
This theme focuses on the intersection of menstrual health and wider health and social wellbeing. We welcome work exploring how biological, psychological, social and environmental factors shape health and wellbeing across the menstrual life course, from menarche to menopause. This includes (amongst others): research and projects on premenstrual disorders; experiences of menstruation for people living with physical, mental, or neurodevelopmental conditions or differences; the influence of problematic menstrual symptoms on health and quality of life; and menstrual health inequalities.
Menstruation and Movement: Participation & Performance in Physical Activity
This theme examines the dynamic, two-way relationship between menstruation and movement. We welcome work on how menstruation, menopause, symptoms and experiences shape participation, performance and inclusion, from everyday physical activity to high performance sport. We are equally interested in research exploring how movement, exercise and sporting environments influence menstrual health, symptoms and wider menstrual wellbeing. Submissions may draw on research, sociocultural, policy or lived-experience perspectives.
Menstrual Products: Access, Design, Health & Sustainability
Focusing on menstrual product access and affordability, user-centred design, product safety, sustainability, innovation, and the wider social, economic and environmental factors that shape product use and equity. We invite research that explores access and affordability, product design and safety, environmental impacts, user experience and bodily wellbeing, as well as the social, economic and political structures that shape product choice and exclusion.
We particularly welcome interdisciplinary and stakeholder-informed work that can inform policy, improve product development and innovation, tackle inequalities, and translate evidence into more equitable and sustainable menstrual product futures.
Additional Themes
Alongside the three core themes, we also welcome submissions addressing broader areas of interest within menstrual health:
Menstrual Dignity, Inequality & Stigma
Menstrual Policy
Menstrual Literacy & Education
Interactive Stalls & Activities
We welcome creative and participatory contributions, including installations, zines, and arts-based or public-engagement activities. We also welcome stalls from charities and companies involved in menstrual health.
What to Expect
- Keynote lectures from leading experts across the three themes
- Interactive workshops across research methods, engagement and impact
- Panel discussions spanning research, policy, and practice
- Poster sessions highlighting work from early-career researchers
- Creative contributions hands-on arts-based activities and performances
We especially encourage submissions from early career researchers, practitioners, and community organisations. Our goal is to create a welcoming and vibrant environment where interdisciplinary ideas can grow and future collaborations can form.
Registration Fees
In-Person Ticket Tiers:
Fees will cover registration, morning and break time refreshments, lunch on two days, and attendance at our social event featuring conference dinner and entertainment on day 1.
- Pay-It-Forward Ticket (£350) – For those who can afford to support underrepresented groups to attend in-person on a subsidised ticket rate
- Supporter Ticket (£250) – For those who want to contribute towards supporting our conference
- General Ticket (£200) – For those who cannot stretch to a Supporter Ticket
- Subsidised Ticket (£150) – For students with no funding; part-time, low-waged, or unpaid workers; and all those who would not otherwise be able to attend
Online Ticket Tiers:
- Online two days (£75) – Online access to talks in the main auditorium for two days
- Online single day ticket (£50) – Online access to talks in the main auditorium for one day