A personal Health Advocate for your loved one.

A healthcare companion designed for real life: no apps, no portals.
Available anytime through simple calls or messages, providing guidance based on real medical information.

  • Reads doctor visit notes and turns them into clear next steps.
  • Explains medications and what side effects to watch for.
  • Sends reminders for doses, refills, and follow-up tasks.
  • Checks in regularly and flags important changes early.
  • Helps manage upcoming tests, appointments, and questions to ask.
  • Provides clear explanations about conditions, and general care topics—without medical jargon.
  • Shares simple updates with trusted family members.

Care that moves as fast as a text thread.

People answer texts. That’s why AdvocAI lives in SMS—meeting them where they are, respecting your time, and keeping the conversation going between visits.

Always available

Never waits for office hours

Gets back instantly with helpful information, follow-up questions, or reminders—any time the patient needs support.

Context aware

Remembers their medical history

Uses the information families share—conditions, meds, allergies, and visit summaries—to give responses that fit their situation.

Bidirectional

Asks and answers

Checks in, follows up on instructions, clarifies next steps, and makes sure important details aren’t missed or forgotten.

Human oversight

Alerts caregivers when something matters

Notifies family members when concerning patterns appear and provides a clear record of what was shared—so caregivers stay informed.

Medication + visit follow-through

Reminds, clarifies, and closes the loop.

No more “Wait, what did the doctor say?” AdvocAI translates visits into a checklist, reminds about doses, and asks if anything feels off. If it does, it raises a hand to a human and keeps loved ones informed.

Dose reminders
Refill prompts
Side effect check-ins
Plain-language instructions
Example SMS thread
Hi Shirley — just checking in. Did you have your appointment with Dr. Diaz today?
Yes, I did.
Great. How did it go?
Good, but a lot of information.
That’s very common. If you have it, can you send me a photo of the visit notes, after-visit summary, or any instructions they gave you? I can help go through it with you.
[uploads photo of after-visit summary]
From what I see, Dr. Diaz started you on amlodipine 5 mg once daily, to be taken in the morning.
Does that match what you were told, and have you already picked up the medication?
Yes, that’s right. I picked it up today.
Great! Most people tolerate this medication well. Early on, some people notice mild dizziness, flushing, or feeling lightheaded, especially when standing up quickly.
I’ll check in with you after your first dose to see how you’re feeling. Would you like me to remind you in the morning?
Yes please
Good morning. It’s time for your first dose of amlodipine 5 mg. Take it with water, and stand up slowly afterward. Let me know how you feel today. I’m here.

Designed by clinicians for their own loved ones.

Keeps track of meds, symptoms, and next steps so families don’t have to do it alone.

Helps manage medications

Sends gentle reminders, tracks changes, and explains what new medications are for—so nothing is missed or forgotten.

Turns visit notes into clear steps

Reads photos of visit summaries or instructions and breaks them into simple tasks families can follow day to day.

Checks in

Asks brief questions, tracks how things evolve, and keeps families informed when something meaningful shifts.

Answers common questions

Explains terms, instructions, and general health topics the way a clinician would to their own family—clearly and calmly.

Safety, privacy, and trust—built in from day one.

Built with clinical standards in mind. It keeps information private, stays in its proper role, and alerts caregivers when something needs real medical attention.

Private by design

All messages are encrypted in transit, identity is confirmed before sharing sensitive details, and no data is sold. Your family stays in control.

Clear boundaries

Provides education, guidance, and organization—but never diagnoses, treats, or replaces a clinician. It supports families while respecting medical roles.

Escalates when needed

Recognizes concerning symptoms, encourages appropriate care, and notifies caregivers when something should be brought to a professional.