Help your parents
through their healthcare.
One button they press at the visit. You see the summary, the new meds, the overdue follow-up — from your phone, wherever you are.
Does this sound like you?
It's 9pm. Mom calls. The doctor changed one of her pills this afternoon and she can't remember which one or why. She wrote it on a napkin. She can't find the napkin. You live three states away.
Or it's the day after Dad's cardiology appointment. You ask how it went. "Fine." That's the whole report. Two weeks later the nurse calls to ask why he didn't schedule the echocardiogram the doctor ordered.
"The doctor changed one of my pills — I wrote it on a napkin but I can't find the napkin."
Set it up once. One button from then on.
You install VisitRecall on your parent's phone. You show them the big button once. From then on, they press it when the doctor walks in. That's it. No accounts to log into in the exam room. No forms. No setup at the visit.
The recording runs in their pocket. The summary lands in your phone the moment they tap to share. You don't need to be in the room — you just need to be the person they sent it to.

Sensitive topics stay private by default.
Not everything a parent tells their doctor is for their kids. Mental health, substance use, sexual and reproductive health — VisitRecall flags these sections automatically and keeps them out of anything shared with family unless your parent explicitly opens them up.
Dad controls what he shares and with whom. You see the blood pressure number, the new statin, the referral to a nephrologist. You don't see the parts of the visit he kept to himself. That's how it should be.

Overdue follow-ups, surfaced.
The cardiologist said schedule an echo in six weeks. The PCP said get the mammogram. The endocrinologist said recheck the A1C in three months. Each one said it once, in passing, and now it's your job to remember.
Up Next pulls every recommended follow-up into one list — scheduled, upcoming, or overdue. You can see at a glance what's been booked and what's slipping. No calendar archaeology.

What it does for you
Shared on your terms
One tap to share. Sensitive topics stay private unless your parent explicitly opens them.
Cross-doctor reconciliation
When the cardiologist and PCP disagree about a medication, ask VisitRecall and you'll see what each one actually said — pulled straight from the recordings, not strained through three voicemails.
Bill review
Your parents' bills are where the real money leaks happen — Bill review matches them to the visit.
Ask at 10pm
When Mom calls confused about a pill, open the app and ask. The answer comes from what the doctor actually said.
HIPAA-aligned. Never sold. Never shared with insurers.
Your parent's data is theirs. We don't sell it, we don't share it with employers or insurers, and we don't train AI on it without explicit opt-in. Full delete anytime.
You don't have to be in the room.
You just have to be prepared.
Free 14-day trial. One subscription covers you and every dependent profile you add.
