This is the story of why we're fixing it.
In 2009, my mother was admitted to a hospital in the Philippines.
When her condition didn't improve, she was transferred to another facility. They received her with nothing. No records. No history. No reference point. They started from zero — repeated tests, repeated diagnosis, repeated time lost.
By the time they figured it out, it was too late.
I carried that with me for years. Not as grief alone — but as a question I couldn't let go of. How does a system this broken stay this broken for this long?
Years later, I moved across three countries with my family. When I enrolled my daughter in school in Singapore, I couldn't prove she had already been vaccinated. I flew back to Indonesia for a single piece of paper. One record. She was vaccinated again — because her history hadn't traveled with her.
Why doesn't the patient own their own health data? Why does it disappear every time you cross a border or change a hospital?
I know I'm not alone in that. Millions of families across Southeast Asia have lived some version of this story. A record that didn't exist. A history rebuilt from scratch. A system that forgot them the moment they walked out the door.
That's not just a data problem. It's a human problem. And it has a structural solution.
That solution is what we're building.