Yes. CIP helps patients and caregivers follow through on discharge instructions—follow-up appointments, referrals, medications, home monitoring, and red-flag symptom checks—so the plan doesn’t get lost after leaving the hospital.
CIP supports ongoing care routines: medication schedules, symptom check-ins, home readings (like glucose, blood pressure, weight, or oxygen saturation), reminders, and guidance on when to escalate to a clinician. It’s designed to reduce missed steps between visits.
Cancer care can involve multiple specialists, tests, treatments, and follow-ups. CIP helps track the next steps, prepare for visits, keep families aligned, and prompt timely follow-up—especially after procedures, new diagnoses, or treatment plan changes.
No. CIP is a care coordination assistant. It helps you stay organized, follow through on the plan, and recognize when you should contact your care team or seek urgent care. It is not a substitute for medical diagnosis or emergency services.
CIP is designed to surface red flags and encourage timely escalation. Depending on the scenario, it can prompt you to contact your care team, follow a clinician-provided plan, or seek urgent/emergency care. If you believe this is an emergency, call your local emergency number immediately.
CIP is designed to be accessible. It can work as a lightweight mobile experience and can also be adapted to messaging-first workflows (like SMS or WhatsApp) depending on deployment needs.
CIP is built with a privacy-first, human-in-the-loop approach. Patients stay informed and in control of their data.
CIP is for patients and caregivers navigating what comes next after hospitalization, diagnosis, or specialist visits—especially for chronic disease management and cancer care coordination. Clinics and care teams can also use CIP to support follow-through between visits.