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Patient profile

Allergies, conditions, providers, insurance, emergency contacts — the page the ER asks for, kept current and shareable.

MMaria Hernandez · 78DOB 1948-03-12 · Spanish-preferredALLERGIESPenicillin (rash), shellfishCONDITIONSHypertension, Type 2 diabetes, mild cognitive impairmentPROVIDERSDr. Chen (PCP) · Dr. Patel (cardio) · Dr. Lee (endo)INSURANCEMedicare A+B · Anthem Blue Cross supplementEMERGENCYJen (daughter) 555-0142 · ICE in iPhone
The page the ER always asks for.

"What medications is she on, who’s her cardiologist, what’s her allergy?"

Every ER visit, every new specialist appointment, every assisted-living intake begins with the same set of questions: allergies, current medications, conditions, providers, insurance, emergency contacts. The family caregiver almost always has the answers, but rarely in one place — the allergy list is in their head, the insurance card is in their wallet, the cardiologist’s phone number is in their phone contacts, the diabetes diagnosis is in last year’s after-visit summary. Reconstructing it under pressure, at 2am in the ER, with a sick parent in front of you, is exactly the moment families want a single page they can hand over.

One canonical profile, kept current by the workspace

Each workspace has a patient profile that holds the structured "who is this person, medically" information: DOB and preferred language, allergies with severity and reaction, active medical conditions, primary providers (PCP, specialists, dentist, pharmacy) with phone numbers, insurance (Medicare, supplement, Medicaid, private), emergency contacts and ICE notes, advance-directive status, code-status preferences, healthcare proxy with contact. The profile is the source of truth that powers the one-page-summary, the share-with-provider link, the smart-upload pre-fill, and the digest emails. Edit it once and every surface it feeds updates.

The ER at 2am, again

You walk into the ER with Mom. The triage nurse asks the standard list. You open Kintaria → Mom → patient profile, and hand the nurse the screen. Allergies (penicillin, rash). Current meds (8, with doses + times). Conditions (hypertension, type 2 diabetes, mild cognitive impairment). Providers (Dr. Chen PCP, Dr. Patel cardiology, Dr. Lee endocrinology, all with phone numbers). Insurance (Medicare A+B + Anthem supplement). Healthcare proxy (you, with the POA on file in the document vault). The nurse takes a photo of the screen. The intake that usually takes 20 minutes takes 4. The doctor who shows up at 2:30am has the whole picture.

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