Need expert sources?
InterviewHer connects journalists with women experts in policy, human rights, peace-building and beyond—helping you find the right voices for every story: https://t.co/IWPZ3IXk2g
URGENT UPDATE: Seventh Day of Nobel Laureate Narges Mohammadi’s Hospitalization
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Narges Mohammadi remains in unstable condition on her seventh day in the Cardiac Care Unit (CCU) of a hospital in Zanjan. Concerns regarding her heart health have escalated significantly.
Based on evaluations by her medical team, the probable diagnosis is Prinzmetal (Vasospastic) Angina, a dangerous condition caused by coronary artery spasms that trigger ischemia (oxygen deficiency) in the heart muscle. It can lead to heart attacks, lethal cardiac arrhythmias, and serious blood pressure fluctuations.
The pain caused by Prinzmetal or vasospastic angina is accompanied by symptoms such as chest tightness, pressure, a sensation of a knot or weight in the chest, cramping, or burning. These discomforts, which often persist for 15 minutes or longer, can be accompanied by nausea, sweating, shortness of breath, or palpitations. Prinzmetal angina typically afflicts the patient while at rest, occurring between midnight and early morning.
Since April 24, 2026, Narges Mohammadi has been waking up every day around 4:00 AM with severe chest pain, heart palpitations, and intense pressure. Analysis of recent severe blood pressure fluctuations shows frequent drops and surges, ranging from 170/110 mmHg to 80/50 mmHg within just a few hours, likely caused by coronary artery spasms and adrenaline surges.
A neuropsychiatrist has categorically stated that these attacks do not solely have a neurological origin; the primary issue is a serious cardiac problem.
Medical specialists emphasize that any delay in transferring her to the care of her previous physician for treatment and specialized angiography at Tehran could result in irreparable life-threatening risks.
Despite the demands of family and doctors for immediate medical action and transfer to Tehran, reports indicate that the Tehran Prosecutor continues to oppose her transfer doubling concerns.
Free Narges and all political prisoners!
Narges Foundation
May 7, 2026
A major Voting Rights Act provision was just struck down: https://t.co/uyPwZjCRV4
Women experts in the U.S. are leading analysis on what this means next.
📢 InterviewHer connects journalists to them.
https://t.co/IWPZ3IWMcI
Women in DR Congo are speaking out about violence during childbirth. Their stories must be centered in coverage: https://t.co/imVPV64lAy
Find women experts in DRC/Congo via InterviewHer to report with depth and accuracy: https://t.co/uLsQhVk9dw
Iranian women are not a side story to war and repression. They are central to understanding it.
This interview highlights how women in Iran face displacement, surveillance, and violence, while continuing to lead resistance and demand freedom:
https://t.co/tpstyJPALR
Women are already leading in compliance, law, tech, finance, and every other sector. The issue is not a lack of expertise. It is a lack of visibility. 👏
That is why InterviewHer matters: helping more women experts get quoted, featured, and heard:
https://t.co/CI5yAstCbX
In eastern DRC, documenting violence is already difficult, with restricted access, fear of reprisals, and limited evidence. When war limits information, accountability becomes harder: https://t.co/tx5lDCqDL1
Find experts on conflict and human rights at InterviewHer.
Human rights defenders in Pakistan are facing prolonged detention, worsening health conditions, and limited access to care. Experts warn this reflects broader patterns of repression and lack of accountability: https://t.co/pbhbbk3bxc
Find experts on these issues at InterviewHer.
Need an expert? We’ve got hundreds.
InterviewHer connects journalists with women experts across industries—no more excuses for all-male panels: https://t.co/IWPZ3IWMcI
From Puerto Rico to the Inter-American Court, Bárbara Jiménez-Santiago advances legal protections for women and girls across Latin America & the Caribbean.
She's one of our InterviewHer experts: https://t.co/pZjMduKfhK
📢 OPEN CALL in Mesoamerica 🌎
Are you a woman activist, researcher, or expert in human rights, gender equality, environment, or peacebuilding?
Join InterviewHer and connect with international journalists: https://t.co/9NGd0Y6d1l
This is what experts look like.
Not just the voices you hear most often, but the ones too often left out.
Women are leading. Women are building. Women are shaping the conversation.
It’s time media reflects that.
Women leaders from Northeast India are shaping conversations on peace and security: https://t.co/wCpda9qOuO
Binalakshmi Nepram (featured in this piece) is also an InterviewHer expert, working at the intersection of gender, conflict, and disarmament.
When women are excluded from research, data, and decision-making, the world works less well for everyone. The same applies to media.
When women experts aren’t interviewed, we all miss out on knowledge and perspective.
That’s why InterviewHer exists.
https://t.co/IWPZ3IWMcI
As tensions escalate in Iran, whose voices are being heard?
Women across the region are often missing from media coverage. Journalists: you can find women experts from the region at InterviewHer.
📢 ¡CONVOCATORIA ABIERTA!
¿Eres una activista, investigadora o experta en derechos humanos, igualdad de género, medio ambiente y áreas relacionadas en Mesoamérica? 🌎
Registra tu perfil para conectar con periodistas internacionales: https://t.co/X2gGBqXEWU
📢OPEN CALL!
Are you a woman activist, researcher or expert in human rights, gender equality, environmental issues, or related fields in Mesoamerica? 🌎
Register your profile to connect with international journalists: https://t.co/IWPZ3IWMcI
Know a woman expert whose voice should be in the media?
Submit her to InterviewHer and help journalists find the expertise they need and the perspectives we need to hear: https://t.co/9NGd0Y6d1l
Women’s History Month is a reminder that women have always shaped history, even when their expertise wasn’t quoted, credited, or amplified.
InterviewHer works to ensure women experts are heard in today’s headlines: https://t.co/IWPZ3IWMcI #WomensHistoryMonth#InterviewHer
50 years after Lebanon’s civil war began, peace remains incomplete.
InterviewHer expert Sania Farooqui breaks down why justice, accountability & women’s leadership are essential: https://t.co/btz1yX2vvy
After CBS pulled a 60 Minutes report on alleged abuses at El Salvador’s CECOT prison, Alexa Koenig of the UC Berkeley Human Rights Center spoke out about the importance of evidence-based human rights reporting.
https://t.co/HUJqkKen1q