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KeptWell

KeptWell is an AI medical document hub for families facing serious illness. Read records, track trends, and share care discussions.

KeptWell

What is KeptWell?

KeptWell is an AI medical document hub for families dealing with serious illness. It brings together medical PDFs, scans, photos of paperwork, voice recordings, and notes, then reads them to surface key findings, track trends, and make the information easier for a family to understand and discuss.

The product is designed to replace the informal medical binder many families assemble during a diagnosis or treatment journey. It gives multiple family members a shared view of the same documents, medication lists, lab trends, and visit notes, and it supports question-and-answer use with citations back to the original records.

Key Features

  • Upload medical documents in multiple formats, including PDFs, scans, photos of paperwork, and voice recordings from appointments.
  • Extracts findings from reports such as pathology documents and highlights abnormal or important details in plain English.
  • Groups and charts lab values over time so users can see trends instead of sorting through individual results.
  • Provides a shared family view so invited caregivers can see the same documents, trends, and medication lists.
  • Supports a private chat workflow where users can ask questions about uploaded records and receive answers with citations to the original pages.
  • Helps prepare for appointments by drafting questions based on recent labs, medications, and notes, with the option to add and print the list.

How to Use KeptWell

Start by signing up with an email link, then upload the medical documents, notes, and recordings you want the system to read. KeptWell processes the material and organizes it into readable summaries, trends, and extracted findings.

From there, invite other family members or caregivers to the shared circle, review what changed over time, and use the chat to ask follow-up questions before or after appointments.

Use Cases

  • A family member uploads pathology, discharge, and lab documents after a new diagnosis and wants a clearer summary of what each report says.
  • Caregivers track a lab value over time, such as platelets or hemoglobin A1C, to understand whether it is rising, falling, or flagged abnormal.
  • Several relatives in different cities need the same current view of documents and medication changes without relying on repeated text-message updates.
  • Someone preparing for an oncology or specialty appointment wants a short list of questions tailored to recent labs, treatment notes, and medication changes.
  • A user wants to ask specific questions about prior notes or reports and have the answer cite the exact source page instead of relying on memory.

FAQ

What kinds of files can KeptWell read?

The page says it can read PDFs, scans, photos of paperwork, and voice recordings from appointments.

Does KeptWell replace the need to read medical records yourself?

It is meant to reduce manual reading by extracting findings, flagging abnormal items, and summarizing records in plain English, but users can still review the original documents and cited sources.

Can multiple family members use the same account or view the same information?

The product supports a shared family circle where invited people can see the same documents, trends, and medication list.

Does KeptWell answer questions about uploaded records?

Yes. It includes a chat interface that answers questions using the uploaded documents and cites the original source pages.

Is KeptWell only for cancer care?

The source centers on families navigating serious illness and includes oncology examples, but it is described more broadly as a medical document hub for families rather than a cancer-only tool.

Alternatives

  • A paper medical binder: useful for organizing printouts by hand, but it does not read documents, summarize findings, or track trends automatically.
  • General cloud storage folders: good for storing files and sharing them, but they do not extract medical data or answer questions about the contents.
  • Patient portal apps: helpful for viewing records from a single provider or health system, but they usually do not unify documents from multiple sources into one family workspace.
  • Manual note-taking and spreadsheet tracking: works for some families, but it requires ongoing transcription and does not provide document-level search, citations, or automated summarization.
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