We were started by a clinician who got tired of starting every complex-care visit from scratch. We build the tool we wished existed when we sat down with a new patient and a forty-page packet of outside records.
MediClarity was founded by Dr. Daniel Korya, a board-certified vascular neurologist. Every product decision passes through clinical review before it ships.
I started MediClarity after watching too many complex-care visits get eaten by chart reconstruction. We build for the visit you wanted to have.
EHR adoption is at 96% across acute-care hospitals. Records are everywhere. What's missing is the layer that makes them legible at the moment a clinician needs to decide.
Fifty-nine percent of US patients have multiple online medical records. Only seven percent use an app to combine them. That gap — between records existing and records being usable — is where MediClarity lives.
We're not an interoperability platform. We're not trying to be the next EHR. We're the small, focused layer that turns a patient's existing records into a structured, longitudinal summary a clinician can read in minutes — and a patient can understand in plain language.
The thesis is simple: when the record finally tells a clear story, every other part of care gets better. Visits go from reconstruction to decision-making. Caregivers stop translating between specialists. Patients stop re-telling their history at every appointment.
The non-negotiables we hold every product decision to.
Every feature passes through clinical review. We ship what makes the visit better — not what's easiest to build.
The data is the patient's. Export anytime. Delete anytime. We never sell it, share it for ads, or train external models on it.
We make records understandable. We don't diagnose, treat, or prescribe. The clinician remains the decision-maker.
We say what we are and what we're not. No oversold claims, no vague promises, no roadmap items disguised as features.
Three groups, one product. Each gets the surface that fits their role.
Adults navigating multiple specialists, recent hospitalizations, chronic conditions, or major diagnoses. The people who carry their own records because no one else has the full picture.
Adult children, spouses, and proxies who coordinate care for someone else. AARP/NAC counts 63 million family caregivers in the US. They do the work of stitching the record together.
PCPs, geriatricians, cardiologists, neurologists, endocrinologists, RPM programs. The clinical teams who need outside records pre-structured before a 15-minute complex-care visit.
In rough order of priority. We update this as work ships — not as a marketing ladder.
Whether you're a clinician evaluating MediClarity for your practice, or a patient looking for a clearer health story — we're easy to reach.
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