One plain paragraph
The dense line of abbreviations becomes a few sentences in everyday language — what is in range, what is slightly off, and what tends to matter.
Report summaries
A lipid panel is a wall of abbreviations and reference ranges. When Amma hands it to you across the dining table, you nod — and quietly have no idea whether anything is wrong. Nityaayu reads that report back to you in one calm paragraph, so you walk into the next appointment with a question instead of a worry.
Cholesterol is a little above the ideal range, mostly the LDL kind — the one usually worth lowering. Triglycerides are slightly high too. Nothing alarming here, but worth raising at the next visit with Dr. Menon.
The original report is always kept, untouched.
The moment it helps
"My father reads every value out loud on the phone, asks me if it's bad, and I pretend to know. Now I read the one-line summary first — then we both actually understand what to ask the cardiologist."
Daughter in Pune · father in Nagpur
What you actually get
Not a verdict. A translation — calm, specific, and honest about its own limits.
The dense line of abbreviations becomes a few sentences in everyday language — what is in range, what is slightly off, and what tends to matter.
The summary sits beside the real report, never on top of it. Tap through to the source PDF any time. Nothing is rewritten or hidden.
Every summary wears a clear AI tag, with a one-line reminder that it explains rather than diagnoses. Turn summaries off entirely if you prefer.
Instead of telling you what to do, a summary points to what may be worth raising — by name — at the next appointment.
How a summary is made
STEP 01
Photograph or upload a lab report. It joins the family vault with its date and the person it belongs to.
STEP 02
Summaries never appear on their own. They are generated only when someone with access chooses to ask for one.
STEP 03
A short paragraph appears beside the report, ready to carry into the next visit — or to forward to a sibling who is going instead.
Before and after
Common questions
No. It explains what the values commonly mean and flags what may be worth discussing. The judgement stays with your doctor — the summary just helps you arrive ready to ask.
Yes, completely. Reports still organise and stay findable; you simply won't see AI explanations. You can also revoke who is allowed to generate them.
Only people the report owner has given access to. A caregiver can be allowed to see reminders without ever seeing reports or their summaries.
Keep reading
Organise prescriptions, lab reports, and discharge notes so the right one surfaces in two seconds — the place every summary is built from.
A treatment timeline that builds itself from the reports and prescriptions already in the family vault.
Medicines, refills, reports, and follow-ups for parents — held together in one calm place.
Exactly where AI helps, where it deliberately stops, and how your health information is handled.
Join early access and tell us which kind of report your family stares at most.