An everyday Tuesday
Tuesday, the 6th of May

A day with the Sharmas.

Kunjan keeps the family well — Mummy’s thyroid, Papa’s heart, Aarav’s vaccines, her own anaemia. This is one Tuesday, hour by hour, with a quiet app helping in the background.

Walk through the day
Free for one family · No credit card to begin
Mummy with morning tea
Mummy · 64
Papa watering balcony plants
Papa · 68
Aarav running
Aarav · 9
Kept safe
218 records
across 4 family members
prescriptions, labs, vitals, vaccinations
our family folder
The day, hour by hour

Six small moments. One quiet day.

Each one is a feature, but you’ll only notice that afterwards. Mostly it’s just a Tuesday.

Kunjan and Papa, looking at the discharge summary
over chai
i

Papa’s discharge summary, over chai.

Kunjan is making the morning chai when Papa shuffles in with a folded paper. Cardiology discharge from Tuesday’s hospital visit. “Beta, keep this somewhere safe.”

She points her phone camera at it. By the time she’s poured the first cup, careKarlo has read it — the doctor, the diagnosis, the new beta-blocker, the follow-up date six weeks out. She taps save.

Paper would have got tea on it by tomorrow.
7:14 AMTuesday morning
Capturing
Discharge Summary · Papa
Apollo Hospital, Indore · Dr. Anand Mehta
reading
Dr. Anand MehtaCardiologyBisoprolol 2.5mgBP 138/86F/U 6 wks+ 8 more
Mummy on the couch with her phone
her own ping
ii

Mummy’s phone buzzes. She has the app too.

A push notification from her own careKarlo. “Folvite 5mg — best after tea.” She rolls her eyes, takes the pill, taps “I took it.” A green tick joins the morning’s other green ticks.

Kunjan, two rooms away, sees the dot land on her own phone — caretaker access. Good. One less thing to ask about at lunch.

She has her own login. Kunjan just gets to be the safety net.
9:30 AMmid-morning
On Mummy’s phone — 9:30 AM
careKarlo
careKarlo
now
Folvite 5mg — best after tea or breakfast 🌿
I took it ✓
Snooze 10m
On Kunjan’s phone, 9:32 AM — Mummy marked Folvite as taken.
iii

An email arrives. The lab again.

Mummy’s TSH report from Lal Path. Kunjan adds it to careKarlo — without opening the PDF. Back to her meeting.

By the time the meeting ends, the report is read, filed under Mummy’s timeline, and one value is gently flagged. TSH up from 5.7 in December. Dr. Meera might want to see this.

Three weeks ago, this would have been a flag we missed.
11:42 AMbefore lunch
Lab — Mummy
Thyroid Panel · Lal Path
Collected 5 May · Reported 6 May
TSH8.4 mIU/L
Free T41.1 ng/dL
Free T32.9 pg/mL
TSH was 5.7 in December. It’s now 8.4. Dr. Meera asked to recheck after 6 weeks — that’s tomorrow’s reminder.
Papa, putting the visit-prep page in his shirt pocket
pocket-ready
iv

Friday’s cardio visit. Already half-prepared.

Papa’s appointment is in three days. Kunjan opens his profile. careKarlo has already pulled together what matters: the last six months of BP readings, the new beta-blocker that started Tuesday, what Dr. Mehta wrote in June, and a small list of questions worth asking.

She prints the page. Papa puts it in his shirt pocket.

He always forgets what to ask.
4:08 PMafternoon
For the doctor — Papa
Visit prep · Dr. Anand Mehta
9 May, 10:30 AM · cardiology follow-up
since last visit
Started Bisoprolol 2.5mg on 6 May. Average BP last 2 weeks: 134 / 84.
questions to ask
— Should evening dose move earlier?
— Is the morning dizziness expected?
— Lipid panel due — when?
what to bring
BP log · Tuesday’s discharge · current medicines list
Aarav with the new pediatrician
new doctor day
v

A new pediatrician. For Aarav.

The old paediatrician retired. Aarav has a sniffle that won’t quit, so they’ve booked Dr. Gupta for tomorrow. She’ll want his vaccine record.

Kunjan picks Aarav · health summary · expires 24 hrs, and WhatsApps the link. Dr. Gupta opens it on her phone — no app, no signup, just a clean page with everything she needs.

Last time, we couldn’t find his BCG card for two days.
7:30 PMafter dinner
Sharing — Aarav
Health summary · for Dr. Gupta
vaccinations · allergies · current medicines
shared via WhatsAppexpires in 24h
vi

The day’s last green tick. Then sleep.

Kunjan brushes her teeth, takes her own thyroid medicine, and marks the last slot complete. Three of three for today. The little ring closes. Adherence: 100% this week.

Tomorrow’s reminder is set for 8 AM. Papa’s BP at noon. Mummy’s blood test result will land in the inbox sometime mid-morning. The app will know what to do.

Tomorrow it starts again. Quietly.
10:11 PMbefore bed
Today — Kunjan
All medicines taken
Tuesday, 6 May · adherence 100%
Morning
3/3
8:00 AM
Noon
2/2
1:30 PM
Night
2/2
10:00 PM
“And that, more or less, is what care looks like in our house. Not loud. Just there.”
— Kunjan, family caretaker
The whole family together — three generations
— how this works in practice —
Mummy has the app too. So does Papa.
The reminders go to their phones, not yours. The records, medicines, timeline — theirs to see, theirs to mark, theirs to keep.
You see what gets done. You step in when it doesn’t. Caretaker, not nag.
A
You set up Mummy.
Add her records, medicines, allergies. Send her an invite — she claims her own access on her own phone, when she’s ready.
or
B
Mummy sets up herself.
She makes her own account, then invites you in as her caretaker. You see her records, help with reminders, never need to nag.
Caretakers see records, help with reminders, never have to nag · invite a sibling, a daughter abroad, anyone you trust
The cast

Whose day is it in your house?

Everyone gets their own profile — own records, own medicines, own timeline. The whole house, one place.

Kunjan
Kunjan
self · 37
17 records
Mummy
Mummy
mother · 64
24 records
Papa
Papa
father · 68
32 records
Aarav
Aarav
son · 9
8 records
+
add member

Adults can have their own login. Children’s profiles you manage. Invite a sibling, a daughter abroad, anyone you trust to be a caretaker — they see the records, help with reminders, never need to nag.

On your data — honestly

Health data is sensitive. We treat it that way.

Three commitments, plain language, no marketing dress-up.

Encrypted, always
Records, photos, and PDFs are encrypted at rest. Connections are encrypted in transit. Standard practice — done properly.
Never sold. Never used to train AI.
Your records aren’t shared with insurers, advertisers, or pharma. AI calls process records temporarily — they’re never retained for training.
You control every share
Every share link has an expiry you choose. Revoke any link any time. Doctors see only what you allow them to see.
Pricing

Free for most families. That’s the point.

Free forever

careKarlo

₹0/ month, always

For one person and one caretaker. Try the whole app, no card asked.

  • Up to 1 member
  • 20 record uploads / month
  • AI prescription & lab extraction
  • Medicine reminders & safety check
  • Visit prep & share links
  • Emergency card
Most families pick this
Family

careKarlo · family

₹199/ month

Everything most families need. Mummy, Papa, kids, you — all in one quiet place.

  • Up to 5 members
  • Unlimited record uploads
  • All AI features & safety checks
  • Visit prep, share links, emergency card
  • Push notifications & adherence tracking
Family+

careKarlo · family+

₹349/ month

For larger households. Three generations, in-laws, the whole crew — covered.

  • Up to 10 members
  • Unlimited record uploads
  • Priority support
  • Everything in Family
Common questions

Things people ask first.

Yes. The Free plan covers your essential needs — enough to try the whole app honestly. If you need more members or higher record-upload limits, you can upgrade to a Family plan any time. No card to start.
Each adult can have their own account — their own login, their own phone, their own data. Setup goes both ways: you can build Mummy’s profile and send her an invite to claim it, or she can create hers and invite you in as caretaker. Caretakers see the records and can mark medicines taken. You stay in their corner without having to nag.
They can have the app — it’s designed for older users, with big text and nothing flashy. Or you can manage their profile from your account and send them an invite later, when they’re ready. Or never. They still get the medicine reminders on their own phone if they want them; you stay in their corner either way.
The link opens a clean, read-only page in any browser — phone or desktop. No signup, no app install. Most doctors find it faster than scrolling through WhatsApp to find the previous prescription.
No, and we don’t pretend it does. careKarlo’s AI reads what you’ve already saved — prescriptions, labs, medicine history — and helps you remember and prepare. The doctor still does the doctoring.
careKarlo

Begin your family’s quiet day.

Health records, medicines, vitals, visit prep — all in one warm place. Free for one family. No credit card to start.

free for one family · no credit card to begin