For parents keeping track
Now on iPhone & iPad

Your kid's whole health story, in one place.

Pediatrician visits, the ER trip you'd rather forget, the specialist referral, the symptoms that come and go. KeptWell reads it all, connects what each doctor saw separately, and gives you one place to understand what's going on with your child — over months and years, not just one bad week.

  • Every flare, every visit, on one timeline.
  • When the specialist asks 'when did this start?' — you know.
  • Both parents see the same record.

Get started

No password. We'll email you a sign-in link — it works whether you're new here or already have an account.

PDF

ER discharge — Mar 14.pdf

Children's · GI

Reviewed
TypeDischarge summary
FindingsAcute pancreatitis, lipase 820
NextPediatric GI follow-up, 1 week

Ask KeptWell

Reading 12 docs

When did Emma's last pancreatitis flare start?

The Mar 14 ER visit — her third flare since last spring. Lipase peaked at 820.

ER · Mar 14GI note · Dr. Nguyen

Third flare in twelve months

Pancreatitis recurring roughly every four months. Worth raising at the GI visit.

ER · Mar 14
Sara, a family member in the care circleMarcus, a family member in the care circleEli, a family member in the care circleYou, a family member in the care circle

Emma's circle, in sync.

The thing on your kitchen counter

You already have a system. It just doesn't work.

The folder of after-visit summaries. The photos of the rash on your phone. The ER paperwork from that one bad night. Every parent tracking a kid's health ends up with a pile. KeptWell replaces it with something that actually understands what's inside — reads every page, pulls out every value, and keeps both parents on the same page.

  • 01The folder of after-visit summaries
  • 02Photos of the rash, buried in your camera roll
  • 03ER discharge papers from that one bad night
  • 04The symptom log you started in your Notes app
  • 05Screenshots of the pediatric specialist's labs
  • 06Sticky notes with questions for the next visit

All of this. In one place. That actually understands it.

What changes on day one

The keeping-track problem — handled.

Mar21

Dr. Nguyen · Pediatric GI

4 questions · 2 ready

  • What's setting off the flares?

  • Three this year — is that a pattern?

  • Any foods to avoid for now?

  • When should we worry enough to come in?

Before the next appointment

Walk in already knowing the history.

KeptWell reads the recent visits, labs, and notes — then drafts the questions worth asking this time. Add your own. Print the list, or pull it up on your phone.

PDF

ER discharge — Mar 14.pdf

1.2 MB · uploaded Mar 14

Reviewed
  • TypeDischarge summary
  • FindingsAcute pancreatitis, lipase 820
  • NextPediatric GI, 1 wk

After the visit

Understand the discharge papers without a medical degree.

Upload the PDF or snap a photo. KeptWell extracts what happened, flags anything new, and explains it in plain English — so the parent who wasn't in the room is already up to speed.

Mom's circle

5 members

  • Sara, Sister · Denver

    Sara

    Sister · Denver

    Seen
  • Marcus, Brother · Atlanta

    Marcus

    Brother · Atlanta

    Seen
  • Aunt Karen, RN · viewing

    Aunt Karen

    RN · viewing

    Unread

Across the family

Everyone caring for your kid is on the same page.

Invite the other parent, a grandparent, the people who help. Everyone sees the same documents, the same timeline, the same medication list. No more midnight recaps over text.

Ask anything

Chat with a version of KeptWell that's read every page.

Every document you upload becomes part of KeptWell's memory. Ask a question and get a real answer — with citations back to the exact page in the exact report.

  • How many pancreatitis flares has Emma had this year?
  • What were her lipase levels each time?
  • Which foods showed up before the last two flares?
  • Summarize everything since her GI referral.

What's inside

Built for the things no one prepared you to do.

A set of tools that together turn a pile of medical paperwork into something you can actually hold in your head.

PDF

ER discharge — Mar 14.pdf

1.2 MB · uploaded Mar 14

Reviewed
  • TypeDischarge summary
  • FindingsAcute pancreatitis, lipase 820
  • NextPediatric GI, 1 wk

Upload anything. Get back answers.

Scans, PDFs, photos of paperwork, even voice recordings from appointments. KeptWell reads it all and pulls out what matters.

Hemoglobin A1C

Last 12 months

High

7.4

%

+0.6 since Apr

See the trend before the doctor mentions it.

Every lab value you've ever uploaded, grouped and charted with reference ranges. Sparklines instead of spreadsheets.

How many pancreatitis flares has Emma had this year?

Three — Mar 14, Nov 8, and Jul 2. Each confirmed by a high lipase (820, 610, 540).

ER · Mar 14Lab · lipase

Ask a follow-up…

Ask. It already knows.

A private chat that's read every document in your circle. Answers come with citations back to the original page.

Mar21

Dr. Nguyen · Pediatric GI

4 questions · 2 ready

  • What's setting off the flares?

  • Three this year — is that a pattern?

  • Any foods to avoid for now?

  • When should we worry enough to come in?

Walk into appointments ready.

Before each visit, KeptWell drafts the questions worth asking — based on recent results, meds, and open threads.

Private journal

Mar 14 · 11:42 pm

Couldn't sleep again

Re-read the path report. Mom seemed quieter on the phone — I don't know if it's the news or the steroids tapering.

MomAnxiousSleep

Only you can see this.

A private journal alongside the shared record.

Notes only you see. Photos, audio, quick thoughts. Tagged automatically and easy to find when it matters.

Medication changes

Last 60 days

  • Lisinopril

    10 → 20 mg · Mar 18

    Dose ↑
  • Atorvastatin

    20 mg nightly · Mar 18

    Started
  • Spironolactone

    · Feb 02

    Stopped

Every med change, on one page.

Started, stopped, dose increased — KeptWell tracks every change and when it happened, so nothing slips through.

Timeline

March

  • Mar 28

    CBC labs

    Labs
  • Mar 21

    Visit · Dr. Patel

    Visit
  • Mar 14

    Pathology report

    Doc
  • Mar 03

    Voicemail · oncology

    Audio

A timeline that tells the story.

Scans, labs, notes, appointments, conversations — arranged chronologically. The shape of the year, at a glance.

Platelets trending lower

Three consecutive draws below range. Last value 91 on Mar 13.

CBC · Mar 13

3 family members notified

View →

Flags when something shifts.

KeptWell watches new uploads for changes worth noticing — a flagged value, a new medication, a surprising finding — and surfaces them.

However your kid's health looks

Built for the long arc of a childhood.

A hand resting quietly on an unopened manila envelope on a kitchen table in late afternoon light.

Every flare, every ER visit, on one timeline.

A condition that comes and goes is hard to see one visit at a time. Upload the discharge papers, the lab printouts, the after-visit summaries — KeptWell lines them up so the pattern you couldn't see across a year is right in front of you.

  • See every episode in order, with dates and labs.
  • Spot how often it's happening, and whether it's changing.
  • Bring the whole history to the next specialist visit.
A row of amber prescription bottles on a bathroom counter in soft morning light.

"When did this start?" Now you know.

Kids see a lot of doctors, and you're the only one who remembers all of it. KeptWell holds the answer: the first time it came up, what the labs showed, what the last doctor said — so you're not reconstructing your child's history from memory in a waiting room.

  • Search years of visits in plain language.
  • Pull up the exact note or lab when you need it.
  • Hand a clean summary to a new doctor in seconds.
A smartphone glowing in a hand, held up against a softly out-of-focus window at dusk.

Both parents, the same record.

One of you took her to urgent care. The other has the next GI appointment. Instead of texting screenshots back and forth, you both see the same documents, the same timeline, the same medication list — updated the moment something lands.

  • Invite the other parent or a grandparent to the circle.
  • Read the doctor's note directly, not a recap.
  • Keep one kid's records cleanly separate from another's.

Circle-shaped, not patient-shaped

Everyone who loves your person, in one place.

Every family has a cast: the adult child coordinating things, the sibling three states away, the cousin who's a nurse, the partner who reads every page twice. KeptWell gives all of them a single view of what's going on — without crossing wires with any other family you're connected to.

  • Invite with an email. No app downloads to stall you.
  • Separate circles stay separate. Nothing bleeds across.
  • Your private notes stay private, even inside the circle.
  • Research you run can be shared with the circle — or not.
Mom

Mom

Your sister in DenverYour sister in Denver
DadDad
Aunt KarenAunt Karen
YouYou
Your brotherYour brother
Home health nurseHome health nurse

The part that shouldn't need saying

Private, by design. Because this is.

Encrypted where it matters.

Sensitive fields — chat messages, journal entries, patient names — are encrypted at rest. Your data isn't sitting in a spreadsheet somewhere.

No ads. No data selling. Ever.

KeptWell doesn't make money off your worst week. We make money the old-fashioned way: families pay us for software that helps.

Circle-scoped by default.

Every document, every note, every comment stays inside the circle it was added to. No cross-family bleed.

Your data, exportable.

Download the whole thing — documents, notes, timeline — as a ZIP, anytime. You own it. We just hold it.

When you're ready, we're here.

Start organizing your family's care today. Invite the people who need to know, and keep everyone on the same page.

Get started

No password. We'll email you a sign-in link — it works whether you're new here or already have an account.