For the person who already manages everything —
Ruth manages the one thing
that makes it all possible.
She walks alongside helping you carry the mental load of your daily life while quietly managing your health — the patterns, the protocols, the things that never quite make it into a twelve-minute appointment. When you need her in your daily life she is there. When you walk into your medical appointments she is already there, she already told your story, she is just waiting for you.
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Maya.
You slept lightly — three wake-ups, mostly between three and four. I'd ease into today. Coffee after the magnesium, not before.
I've written up the last six weeks — the sleep, the cycle shift, the two flares. She'll have it before you arrive.
The founder walked into her appointment with a published allergist/immunologist and handed him documents Raora had generated after being undiagnosed and chronically sick for a decade. He had read them before she sat down and the entire appointment went differently than any other appointment. He went straight to the clinical gaps. For the first time, she didn't have to prove herself. In that one appointment, Ruth gave hope back to the hopeless — and changed the direction of her care.
Your health, held.
Quietly. Daily. Completely.
Notice something? One tap, speak it, done. Ruth holds your life, your family, and your work. She is your constant companion so you don't have to manage one more thing alone.
While you're living your life, Ruth is watching over your health in it. Tracking patterns, connecting dots, building the full picture — without requiring anything from you.
Before any appointment, Raora translates everything Ruth holds into documents your provider already knows how to read. You walk in as a partner — not a puzzle to reconstruct in twelve minutes.
The prepared patient isn't your burden. They're your best appointment.
You went to medical school to solve hard problems. Instead, the first eight minutes of nearly every new patient appointment are spent reconstructing history the patient already lived — history that exists somewhere, but never seems to arrive in the room with you.
You are not frustrated with your patients. You are frustrated that you don't get to do your job.
A patient with a decade of complex, unresolved health history saw a new allergist-immunologist. Three Raora documents arrived at his office a few days before the appointment. When she walked in, he had already read them. He skipped the intake. He went straight to the clinical gaps.
For the first time, she didn't have to prove herself. He got to be a doctor.
Written in the patient's own voice. The illness arc, the turning points, what has and hasn't worked — structured as a narrative so nothing is performed from memory under pressure.
The same history in clinical register. Formatted for a physician reader. Written to orient your thinking before the clock starts — not to direct it.
A structured summary of the patient's ongoing symptom patterns, wearable data, and daily observations — collected by Ruth and translated by Raora into clinical language. Not raw patient notes. Organized, translated, and written for you.
The intelligence is the patient's. The translation is Raora's. Nothing is invented — everything in these documents came from the person sitting across from you.
Read them before the appointment. That is the entire mechanism. Raora and the patient do the heavy lifting. Everything that changes in the room depends on this one step.
"We don't really get the right information until the very end. A timeline-like snapshot ensures things aren't missed."
Raora is currently building its clinical network with providers whose patients tend to arrive with complex, multi-system histories — the appointments where context matters most and time is shortest.
If that describes your practice, we'd like to hear from you.
Provider inquiries → hello@raora.healthYour story, whole.
Your provider, ready.
Ruth walks beside you — carrying the weight, watching the patterns, making sure everything that matters is already in the room when you need it most. This is what healthcare always should have been.
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"I saw they were dirty so I washed their feet.
I saw they were hungry and I fed them.
I saw they were searching so I pointed them to you."