What happens between your father's morning 🍵 and his next consultation.
Pushpa works in the quiet hours between doctor visits. Here's a single day in May, at the Iyer house in Bangalore — a 67-year-old father, a 42-year-old daughter living abroad, and the small, important details Pushpa keeps track of.
Appa wakes up. Pushpa already knows what's due.
The day's medicines, today's vitals, and any pending questions appear on a single screen — large type, plain words, voice-ready. He doesn't have to remember anything.
A new kidney report comes back. Routed to the AI Nephrologist.
Appa photographs the printout. Pushpa recognizes it as a Kidney Function Test, routes it to the AI Nephrologist, and prepares a plain-language summary that highlights what changed since last month.
He felt dizzy after lunch. Pushpa asks the right questions.
Appa says it out loud. Pushpa asks the same follow-ups a doctor would — how long, how often, on standing or lying down — and routes the conversation through the AI General Physician, then the AI Cardiologist for context with his BP medicines.
His daughter, in Toronto, gets a quiet update.
No surveillance, no panic message. A simple, weekly digest: what changed in vitals, what reports came in, what's worth a phone call. She decides whether to call Appa now or at the weekend.
Pushpa's draft response is reviewed by Dr. Iyer before it reaches Appa.
The AI Cardiologist suggests "discuss dose timing" — but it's a treatment-related thought. Pushpa routes it to Dr. Iyer for review. He edits, approves, and the suggestion reaches Appa with the doctor's name attached.
The day closes. The next visit is already half-prepared.
By Saturday morning, Dr. Iyer's visit summary is ready. Things to mention. Questions to ask. Reports to share. Pushpa compiled it as the day went on — Appa and Riya didn't have to remember a thing.
Bring this kind of day to your father.
Early access opens this season. Limited to families managing one or more long-term conditions.