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Make Your Home Health Data Work Harder for You

  • Capture it from any device and connect the pieces

  • Loop in family and friends
  • Track over time and spot patterns

  • Get guidance

  • Walk in confident to your Doctor's visit

Uses technologies familiar to 
billions of consumers

  • Smartphone cameras

  • Popular text messengers

  • Unconnected devices

No bluetooth. No pairing hassles.

If you have a smartphone and text messaging, you’re good to go.

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Works with Data You Already Have

Blood Pressure

Simple to Use. Powerful Results.

  1. Take a photo

  2. Upload

  3. Get Insights

  4. Share

Your caregivers, your doctors. Together.

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With permission, your care circle can enter data for you, view and act on your behalf. 

One View of Your Home Health Data

ContinuumCare Dashboard

People respond differently to medications

Continuity of monitoring 
contributes to finding what works

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See your combined reports over time

Labcorp, Quest, Hospital labs, Home, Functional health:
Any Lab Report

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 Converse with Your Own Health Data

Select a question. Or ask your own.

Health Tutor can help with your Home Health Homework

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Healthy Aging at Home is Not a Solo Mission.

When people who care about you understand your health data, they can show up in ways that help - escalating a nagging concern, core strength stretches together, a pep talk on a long walk.
 

Good intentions becomes friendships.

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Power up your circle of support.

Built for Trust

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Guideline-Based Insights

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Clinical-Grade Device Support

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HIPAA Compliant

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Encrypted End-to-End

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Private and Secure

This is How We Stay Healthy Longer, Living the Life We Want
More Circle of Care Stories

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    Nina's (55) job as a Caregiver, “…is to help with daily living tasks, assisting my client with mobility, ensuring they eat healthy food, take their medications, and to maintain a cheerful environment while I am there”.

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    She added: “I started doing this for my own dad five years ago and realized I could earn income using these skills with a paying client through an organization.”

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    Her client, Robert, is 89 and lives alone. Digital syncing of his monitors can get tricky when it is connected to his App so it is not part of the job, So, when she take his temperature and blood sugar, she writes it down in her notebook..

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    “I met Continuum when Robert’s daughter Lisa, who lives in Portland, was visiting him and she tried to get her dad to manage his hypertension and take his blood pressure using Continuum’s photo and text system. He was not too eager to do this but agreed for his daughter’s sake. I agreed to help them. She created an account for me as one of his caregivers. I now take pictures of his blood pressure and SpOâ‚‚ screens a few times a week and add other information Lisa would like to know, such as his symptoms, how he feels, how he is managing, and any changes I observe using the frailty section of the Continuum app.”

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    Nina said she liked using the system because it was easy to use on her own phone and it added something meaningful to her role. Doctors and nurses don’t have much visibility to the client’s health until there is a crisis, so she felt she had an important role to play in between the two. She said, “Knowing that Lisa would review the readings and take needed action made my job more satisfying.”

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    Nina added, “I am now using it to monitor my own father’s vitals, including his labs and blood sugar. Making it so simple reduces stress for me at work.

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    Maya (45) lived in Houston, TX where she and her husband were working parents raising three teenagers. They'd convinced her father who was 80 and living at home in Delhi, to use a local Caregiver service so they could stay connected to his health without daily check-in calls. The Caregiver would measure his vitals - his BP, SpO2 etc. and photo them and send them to Continuum.

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    One evening, they got an alert - Papa's oxygen saturation was low. Maya called her father and while they talked, she pulled up a 30-day health report that showed a troubling pattern: his O2 levels had been declining gradually to between 90-95%, his heart beat rate was high, he had gained a few pounds, and he'd been reporting more breathlessness during routine activities.

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    Papa said the air quality was to blame but he promised to schedule an appointment and text them the details.

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    His Cardiologist said, "I'm glad you came in when you did. If we'd waited, you could have ended up in the ER."

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    Maya told us: "Papa is quite well for his age, so we focussed on his daily walks, appetite and building his spirits. Now we know to monitor his vitals and labs more carefully and share them with his Doctors."

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    #CareCircle Booster    #Pattern Magnifier

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    When Maria was diagnosed as pre-diabetic at 58, it felt inevitable. Diabetes ran in her family—her mother, her uncle, and two cousins. Nutrition, exercise, and metformin were not working. Her BMI was steady at 35 and she needed to do something about it.

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    Her doctor prescribed a GLP-1, and they agreed on targets and to check in every month. She bought an FDA-cleared, for-home-use A1cNow test from her drugstore costing about $20/test. She weighed herself, took her BP, wore her CGM, and wrote it all down, including how she felt.

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    The scale moved slowly. It was hard to see and share her progress with her doctor from her handwritten notes and spreadsheets. After 2 months, she felt nauseous and tired and was ready to quit or try something else. That's when her pickleball partner Natalie, who was a Continuum Beta user, suggested she sign in as her Care Receiver, and she could digitize her data with her smartphone camera and WhatsApp and graph her data and labs. Another 6 weeks into it, while she still felt sick, the pattern was unmistakable: weight loss correlated with HbA1C improvements. And she noted that, her energy levels were higher.

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    The tracking was proving her efforts were working. Her doctor agreed. She doubled down and watched the data confirm she was moving in the right direction.

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    Six months in, her HbA1C reading came back in the normal range, and her doctor reduced the GLP-1 dosage to a tolerable level.

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    When her daughter texted her with a smiley emoji to congratulate her and asked what made the difference, Maria smiled back and said, "Natalie told me that if I was not keeping score, it was only practice and I needed to play to win. The data became my Northstar and kept me going one week at a time". Natalie and her daughter are now Maria's Caregivers, and she is happy that they have her back.

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    #Always Available Data Capture   #Effortless Data Fusion   #Converse with Your Data

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    Janet (65) has a family history of high cholesterol, and her own lipid levels have been elevated. She began Lipitor nearly 30 years ago and has meticulously tracked her blood tests in a spreadsheet. Her cholesterol, once in the high 200s, has hovered around 100 on statins. Recently, her doctor prescribed Repatha, a therapy targeting the PCSK9 pathway, and the impact was dramatic: her lipids dropped by 60%. Her physicians were impressed. She reflects that earlier access to this therapy might have reduced some of her carotid artery plaque.

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    Janet’s parents, now in their 90s, are doing well for their age. She actively tracks their vitals, ECG, cholesterol and symptoms, sometimes uploading the data herself and sometimes through their nurse. They speak often, review their numbers, and prepare questions ahead of medical visits. Janet makes a point to encourage them, recognizing their example for the next generation.

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    Her 25-year-old son currently has normal but rising lipid levels. He maintains a healthy diet and is physically active. Janet wondered whether he might avoid statins and instead consider earlier use of Repatha. Sharing her own history and her mother’s with his PCP, along with detailed records from the Continuum app, prompted the physician to order a genetic testing panel for both of them that confirmed the genetic variation.

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    Given the current high cost of Repatha his doctor started him on a statin. He is now tracking his cholesterol, ApoB and Lp(a) blood tests and gets alerts of newer PCSK9 inhibitors in development.

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    For Janet’s son, long-term family health history is not just a form to be filled in the doctor’s office. He is collecting data on his own trajectory as he transitions from his parent’s health plan’s EMR, to his college plan EMR and now his own ACA plan’s EMR. It is ongoing input into the choices he can make to protect his long-term health.

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    #Health Tutoring   #Effortless Data Fusion

Learn More About How to Extend Years of Healthy Aging at Home.

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