Health is an anxious context — the app has to feel calm, clear and dependable. We've built real-time doctor booking that people relied on, then handed it over cleanly.
In much of the region the friction in healthcare isn't the consultation — it's getting to it: phone calls in narrow office hours, no visibility into which doctor is free when. We build around real-time availability so patients book in seconds and both sides get reminders.
We were on the founding team of DocDoc and designed and built it end to end — doctors publish slots, patients book instantly, with video where it's needed. The product was later sold to a healthcare company in Palestine.
Genuine open slots with instant confirmation — a slot taken on one device disappears everywhere immediately.
Search by specialty, location and real availability, not a stale directory.
Visit reminders that cut no-shows for patients and clinics alike.
A simple, private visit history kept in one place for the patient.
Video visits over WebRTC when the appointment can happen remotely.
Data minimisation, encryption and access controls built in from the first frame.
A focused first version is typically a few months of milestone-based build after a two-week discovery sprint. Real-time availability, reminders and records form a tight first scope; video and integrations can follow.
It depends on scope — booking only, or booking plus video, records and clinic integrations. We quote a fixed price after a paid two-week discovery sprint. See our pricing page for the model.
We design for data minimisation, encryption in transit and at rest, and role-based access. We'll align with the privacy regime that applies in your market as part of discovery.
Yes — we build in-app video over WebRTC for remote visits, as we did on DocDoc.
Usually yes, via APIs. We scope the integrations that matter in discovery rather than promising everything up front.
Two-week discovery, fixed price, and a build plan you keep — even if you don't continue with us.