Not a healthcare demo โ an electronic medical record that runs a working medical practice every single day, now expanding into Medicare home health with a complete agency platform, a native Android app for clinicians in the field, and an AI receptionist answering the clinic's actual phone.
The flagship: a full multi-specialty EMR and practice-management system used every day by a real clinic โ scheduling, charting, billing, patient portal, certified e-prescribing. The public demo runs entirely on made-up sample data.
replacesThe complete Medicare home-health agency workflow โ from referral through OASIS-E (Medicare's required patient assessment), the 485 plan of care, EVV (electronic proof the visit happened), and PDGM billing (how Medicare decides what an episode pays) to QA โ built and proven in six stages.
replacesA native Android app for home-health clinicians: today's visits in driving order, documentation that works with no signal, and GPS-verified check-in and check-out for every visit.
replacesThe platform's built-in AI answering the clinic's real inbound phone line โ greeting callers, figuring out what they need, taking messages โ and it can be switched off instantly, returning the line to ordinary voicemail.
replacesThe go-to-market strategy: replace an agency's current home-health EMR at 30% less with the setup fee waived โ an offer that still works financially because AI-assisted documentation costs cents per visit, leaving roughly 78% gross margin.
replacesMost healthcare software is built at arm's length from actual patient care. This suite runs a working practice โ every scheduling quirk, billing edge case, and 2 a.m. refill request has already been handled before a prospect ever sees the product. The home-health expansion is built on that same proven core, so the newest offering starts from software a clinic already depends on, not a prototype.
One stack, one record. The EMR, the home-health module, the field app, and the voice AI share one data model and one identity layer โ the visit a nurse documents on a phone in a patient's living room lands in the same chart the physician signs and the same claim the biller submits.