Personal Health · Research-Backed · Private

An archive that pays attention to your family’s health.

Conditions, medications, blood tests, journal entries, and therapeutic goals — connected to peer-reviewed research and an AI chat that has read your file before it answers.

No credit card · Sign-in is the only way past the door

7

Peer-reviewed research databases, cited in-line

Records, journal entries, and notes per family

1

Private archive — every member, one shelf

0

Bytes of your data sold, ever
What it does

Three ideas, one private archive.

Records

The medical record, broken into the pieces that matter.

Conditions, medications, lab markers with per-marker trajectories, symptoms, allergies, doctors, appointments — each in its own view, all cross-linked.
Research

A literature library bolted to the side of your file.

Every claim and citation pulls from PubMed, CrossRef, Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, Europe PMC, arXiv, and DataCite. Confidence-scored, never inferred from nothing.
Reasoning

A chat that has read your file before it answers.

Vector retrieval over your own conditions, medications, and labs grounds every response. Async DeepSeek workflows handle longer synthesis. Audio rendering when you want a voice in the room.
Why this exists

For most of last year, my family’s health lived in seven different places.

A note app for my son’s symptoms. A folder of PDF lab results I refused to delete. A photo of a prescription label, taken sideways at a pharmacy counter. A browser tab, kept open for weeks, on a paper I half-understood. The spreadsheet I promised myself I’d keep up with.The spreadsheet, of course, was the first thing to go quiet.ResearchThera is what happened next. The thing I wanted wasn’t a dashboard. It was an archive that paid attention — one private shelf, indexed and searchable, that doesn’t forget what it was told three months ago.
What’s actually in there

Inside ResearchThera.

Eight surfaces. One record. None of these are separate purchases or plugins — they all share the same archive, the same tags, and the same chat.

Health

The medical record, in pieces.

Conditions
Medications
Blood tests with per-marker trajectories
Symptoms log
Allergies & intolerances
Brain & memory baselines
Doctors directory
Open issues per family member
Therapy & treatment protocols
Plan

Intentions made concrete.

Therapeutic goals with target dates
Sub-goals & per-goal reading list
Routines & morning protocols
Habits with streaks
Loops — long-running personal experiments
Tasks
Appointments calendar
Stories — narrative summaries for doctors
Journal

Long-form, taggable, searchable.

Daily journal
Free-form notes
Discussions — multi-turn reflection threads
Shared tag system across the archive
Per-tag aggregation pages
Full-text search over everything
Family

Several people, one shelf.

Per-member health record
Per-member contacts (doctors, schools, therapists)
Affirmations & calming-plan pages
Psych-screen tooling
Per-member dashboards & overdue alerts
Read-only sharing with people you let in
Research

A literature library, in-line.

PubMed
CrossRef
Semantic Scholar
OpenAlex
Europe PMC
arXiv
DataCite
AI claim cards with confidence scores
Per-paper notes & highlights
AI workflows

Grounded, cited, never narrating.

Grounded health chat over your records
Vector search across symptoms, markers, notes
Async DeepSeek synthesis & research workflows
ElevenLabs TTS for therapeutic audio
Discussion-guide generation for journal entries
Recommendation surfaces (next read, next question)
Documents

Letters, scans, discharge summaries.

Private object storage for medical PDFs
Per-document tagging & member assignment
In-app viewing — no third-party redirects
Lab-PDF marker extraction
Bulk upload from email or download
Audit-style change log
The rest of life

Health doesn't sit in a separate folder.

House overview
Vehicles & camping setup
Books & audiobooks
Games & movies
Search across every domain in one box
Cited from

Every claim traceable to peer-reviewed sources.

The chat and claim-card subsystems pull from seven major research databases. A claim that can’t find a source says so out loud — never narrates from nothing.

PubMed
CrossRef
Semantic Scholar
OpenAlex
Europe PMC
arXiv
DataCite
Common questions

The questions people ask first.

If any of this sounds like the tool you’ve been keeping in spreadsheets

Make an account. See if it earns its keep.

Add one family member, one medication, one PDF of a blood test. No credit card. No onboarding wizard. The rest of the app is behind the door — sign in is the only way past it.

ResearchThera · a private notebook for health, with a research library bolted to the side.