What if living with a neurodegenerative disease could be less hard — for everyone?
The experience of neurodegenerative disease is fragmented, burdensome, and under-observed — for patients, families, and clinicians alike. Ojas is building a calm care intelligence layer to change that.
The quiet gap between visits —
where care actually happens.
Most daily care decisions happen at home — medication timing, symptom shifts, sleep changes, caregiver judgment calls. The clinical visit is essential, but it captures only a snapshot.
Ojas creates a calm, structured layer of visibility between the people who give care and the clinicians who guide it.
Principles that guide everything we build.
Care First
Support people before optimizing data. Every decision starts with the person.
Signal Over Noise
Capture meaningful patterns over time, not one-off snapshots.
Caregiver as Co-Primary
Caregiver input is a core signal, not a secondary note.
Clinical Humility
Ojas supports conversations. It does not replace clinicians.
Built for families. Useful for clinicians.
For Families and Caregivers
Reduce the burden of remembering every fluctuation. Capture what happened, when it happened, and what changed — in a format that supports real conversations.
See How Ojas WorksFor Clinicians and Partners
Move from anecdote-heavy recall toward structured longitudinal context. Ojas is built to improve continuity and reduce information loss between visits.
Read Clinical RationaleBuilding something this important takes the right partners.
For Investors
See the opportunity behind compassionate care intelligence — a $131B market with no incumbent solving for caregivers, comorbidities, or sex-informed design.
See The OpportunityFor Clinicians & Researchers
Explore how Ojas can complement your practice with structured longitudinal data that bridges the gap between clinic visits.
Explore PartnershipWe share our thinking publicly while building with safety-first product principles.
Every decision is being shaped carefully around Parkinson's care, caregiver realities, and the clinical space between visits.