The family is the unit of care.
Not the patient alone. Not the clinician alone. The family — siblings, spouses, paid helpers, neighbors — is who actually carries the load.
About
The sandwich generation — the millions of adults caring for an aging parent while still raising kids, working full-time, and trying to keep a marriage alive — gets very little software designed for them. The tools that exist are built for clinicians, payers, or institutions. The family is left with a group text, a sticky note, and a notebook in the glove compartment.
We're a small team that has lived this. Caregiver is the tool we wished we had when the call came — the one that helps you remember what was said, share it with siblings who weren't in the room, and find the help you didn't know existed.
Founder note: a more personal origin story will live here at launch.
What we believe
The things that guide every design and product decision.
Not the patient alone. Not the clinician alone. The family — siblings, spouses, paid helpers, neighbors — is who actually carries the load.
What happens in a 20-minute doctor visit shapes the next three months at home. Capturing it well is the highest-leverage thing software can do.
Encrypted. HIPAA-compliant. Never sold. Never used to train external AI. Audit-logged. The default, not an upsell.
If using Caregiver feels like another job, we've failed. The good days are the ones where you barely notice it.
The point is the parent on the couch, the sibling on the phone, the doctor at the visit. Software is the supporting cast.
One email when the iPhone app is ready in July. That's all.