Geriatric care is complex in ways most families don't realise — multiple conditions, interacting medications, gradual changes that are invisible until they aren't. Saaha holds the full picture between visits, so nothing is missed and no one is guessing.
As the body ages, health needs more consistent attention — not because something is always wrong, but because staying well requires staying on top of it.
When your parent has diabetes, hypertension, and arthritis simultaneously, each condition changes how the others behave. A medication for one can worsen another. Standard care treats them separately. Geriatric care has to hold all of them at once.
The signals come weeks or months before the crisis — a change in appetite, more fatigue, a skipped medication. By the time anyone notices, the window for early action has often passed. You need a system watching the in-between, not just the appointments.
A phone call shows you a moment. A visit shows you a day. Neither shows you a trajectory. Children living away are managing their parents' health on memory and hope — with no system holding the continuity.
This is the gap Saaha is built for.
Saaha brings your parent's full health picture together and keeps daily care on track — so the family always knows what's going on, and acts before things go wrong.
Every condition, medication, lab report, and doctor note — organised, connected, and explained in plain language. No more piecing things together from WhatsApp messages and scattered files. When anything changes, you'll know what it means and what to do about it.
Saaha keeps daily care consistent — medications, routines, check-ins — without requiring you to supervise every day. And when something in the pattern genuinely shifts, you'll hear about it. Not noise. Not daily updates. Just the signal that matters, when it matters.
Most health apps assume the elder will learn something new. Saaha doesn't. Elders interact through WhatsApp — the app they already use every day to message their children. No new app to download. No new habit to form. Reminders, check-ins, and health nudges arrive the way a message from family would. Simple, familiar, and easy to respond to.
A short guided onboarding — conditions, medications, daily routine. No documents required at the start. Saaha builds the initial health profile from what you know.
Every condition, medication, and history is connected into a living geriatric health profile — not a static record, but a context that updates as things change.
Reminders, check-ins, and health nudges go to your parent through WhatsApp. Saaha monitors adherence and flags meaningful changes — not noise.
A clear dashboard shows what's stable, what's shifting, and when to step in. No daily check-ins required. No anxiety-fuelled guessing.
Saaha's clinical framework is grounded in geriatric medicine — reviewed by practising geriatricians, not adapted from general health tools.
Every feature is designed around multimorbidity and longitudinal care — not adapted from adult health tools or generic wellness apps.
End-to-end encrypted. Your family's health data never leaves your control. Built to the highest standard of India's data protection law.
Built for the Indian geriatric context — the conditions, the family dynamics, the metro-parent-hometown distance that defines how most families actually live.
Geriatric isn't just a word for "very old." It refers to the stage where the body is managing multiple health conditions at once — diabetes, hypertension, arthritis — each affecting the others. Most people reach this stage around 60–65, sometimes earlier.
A doctor sees your parent for 15 minutes, every few weeks. What happens in between — medications missed, appetite changes, a growing fall risk — has no one in charge of it. That gap is where most geriatric health quietly goes wrong.
Standard apps are built for one condition, one goal, one active user. Geriatric care involves multiple conditions, many medications, and a family member who isn't always physically present. The challenge isn't reminders — it's keeping everything coherent over time.
Continuous tracking isn't about watching your parent. It's about building a health baseline so that when something shifts, you have context to understand it. You're not monitoring behaviour — you're tracking health over time, the way a good doctor would.
Geriatric decline is rarely sudden — it builds quietly over months. The best time to start is when things are stable, because that's when you establish what normal looks like for your parent. Without a baseline, you're always reacting.
Physical presence helps, but it doesn't create health coherence. A caregiver manages tasks. A sibling manages the immediate. Neither typically holds the full clinical picture — conditions, medication interactions, trends over time. That thread needs its own system.
Most families manage elder care through memory, WhatsApp forwards, and periodic anxiety. Saaha holds the full health context over time, keeps daily care stable, and surfaces signals before they become emergencies — consistently, not just when someone remembers to check.
Each of those covers one slice — data, physical support, or crisis intervention. None of them hold the space in between. Saaha is built specifically for that gap: the daily continuity of care that connects everything else.
Saaha is in early access. Join the waitlist and be among the first families to get started.