Care shouldn’t break with distance.
You shouldn’t need to call ten times a day to feel okay. And your family shouldn’t feel monitored to be safe. We’re building a calm, respectful way to stay informed, especially when something goes wrong.
- In emergencies, “I didn’t know” becomes regret. Awareness is protection for you and for them.
- Distance shouldn’t decide outcomes. Shared context helps families act sooner, not later.
Hospitals shouldn’t require a suitcase of paper.
Every visit feels like starting over. A doctor asks about allergies, past reactions, and old prescriptions. Answers are buried in folders. MyMedicals centralizes your medical truth so it’s there instantly, even under pressure.
- In urgent moments, time spent searching becomes risk.
- Centralized context helps doctors decide faster and safer.
Trust happens when control is real.
People don’t share health data because a brand asks them to. They share when the system proves it: private by default, shared by consent, minimal by design. Trust isn’t a claim. It’s a mechanism you control: what’s shared, when, and with whom.
- Consent isn’t a checkbox. It’s an always-on boundary.
- When sharing is intentional, trust becomes immediate, not negotiated.
Scanning a prescription should be enough.
Manual entry is where care systems fail real people. The simple version should be the default: scan a prescription, confirm the details, and move on. We’re building MyMedicals so it fits into busy lives, and still feels effortless for elders.
- Less friction means routines stick, even in real-world chaos.
- The best systems work for the least tech-savvy person in the family.
Because we’ve lived the problem, and we don’t want anyone else to.
We’ve watched our friends and families scramble for records. We’ve seen medication routines collapse under real-world chaos. MyMedicals is our commitment to a different future: calm, coordinated, and trustworthy healthcare, starting with families like yours and ours.