ORIS · always on, always calm

Health is confusing.
ORIS makes it clear.

A calm intelligence for the questions you've been carrying. Plain language in. Plain language out.

Rymeda Community and ORIS are built for education, connection, and guidance. They are not replacements for emergency care, diagnosis, or treatment from a licensed clinician.

ORIS
Someone is asking

"What does 'mildly elevated' mean on my thyroid panel?"

ORIS
ORIS suggestion · Thursday
  • Bring your symptom log
  • Ask about magnesium
  • Confirm next test date
When to escalate

Chest pain with shortness of breath. Call your local emergency number now.

Thinking with 3 people right now
Someonedecoded a lipid panel
A caregiverprepped 3 questions for oncology
A parenttranslated a discharge note
A new patientasked what 'idiopathic' means
Someonechecked when to go to the ER
A teenorganized questions before a derm visit
A readerunpacked an MRI report
Someoneframed a question about medication interactions
Someonedecoded a lipid panel
A caregiverprepped 3 questions for oncology
A parenttranslated a discharge note
A new patientasked what 'idiopathic' means
Someonechecked when to go to the ER
A teenorganized questions before a derm visit
A readerunpacked an MRI report
Someoneframed a question about medication interactions
In practice

Three quiet moments where ORIS shows up.

Not a chatbot in a sidebar. A calm presence at the exact moment a health question lands.

ORIS
Decoding a lab result
Translate
What does "A1C 6.2" mean? Should I be worried?
ORIS
That sits in the prediabetes range (5.7 to 6.4). Not diabetes, but a signal worth paying attention to. Many people move it back with small daily changes.
ORIS
Want to ask your doctor
  • · What's a healthy A1C goal for me?
  • · When should I retest?
ORIS
Preparing for a visit
Organize
I have a cardiology appointment Thursday. I don't know what to ask.
ORIS
Three things to walk in with
  • A 2-week symptom timeline
  • Your current meds + doses
  • Your top 3 questions, in order
ORIS
I can shape those questions with you now if you'd like.
ORIS
Knowing when to escalate
Safety first
My dad has sudden chest pain and trouble breathing.
ORIS
This is a moment for emergency care

Call your local emergency number now. Don't wait. Don't drive yourself.

ORIS
I'll stay with you. When you're ready, I can help you write down what's happening for the responders.
A new kind of intelligence

It listens like a friend.
It thinks like a guide.

ORIS lives in the moment between "I don't understand this" and "I know what to ask next." No jargon. No judgment. Just calm, grounded clarity.

Translates jargon
Organizes thoughts
Frames questions
QR
LP
MO
WO

Thinking with people, caregivers and providers in early beta.

ORIS
ORIS
Thinking with you
My doctor said my A1C is 6.2. Should I be worried?
ORIS
An A1C of 6.2 is in the prediabetes range (5.7 to 6.4). It's not diabetes, but it's a signal worth paying attention to. Many people move back into the normal range with small daily changes.
ORIS
Three things to ask next visit
  • · What's a healthy A1C goal for me?
  • · Should I retest, and when?
  • · Any habits you'd start with first?
Ask ORIS anything about your health…
What ORIS can do

Turn confusing health language into clearer next questions.

ORIS is a guide, not a doctor. Plain language in, plain language out, with the structure to bring to your provider.

Plain English

Ask anything. Get an answer you understand.

ORIS rewrites medical jargon into language that makes sense. Asks one question at a time. Knows when to stop and tell you to see a real clinician.

What does HbA1c mean?
ORIS
In plain English
  • A snapshot of your average blood sugar over 3 months.
  • Used to track how diabetes risk is trending.
  • Lower is generally better. 5.7 to 6.4 is prediabetes.
Why does it matter?How is it tested?Foods that help?
Appointment prep

Walk into every visit with the right questions.

ORIS helps you turn worries into a checklist of questions your provider can actually answer.

Prep checklist
Dr. Reyes · Cardiology
  • Should I worry about my BP trend?
  • Can I cut Lisinopril in half?
  • Should I check my A1c too?
  • Am I still a candidate for the heart imaging?
Symptoms in plain language

Understand what your body is telling you.

Describe a symptom. Get a calm explanation of what it might mean and when to take it seriously.

Sharp pain on my left side, comes and goes
ORIS
What it could be
  • · Muscle strain after activity
  • · Trapped gas or digestion
  • · Something to ask a clinician about
When to worry

Sudden severe pain, fever, or pain with vomiting. Seek care now.

Track until you see someone
  • · When the pain starts and stops
  • · What makes it better or worse
Not a diagnosis. Talk to a clinician if it gets worse.
Medication explainer

Know what you're taking and why.

Drop in a medication name. Get a clear breakdown: what it does, how it works, common side effects, what to ask about.

Medication
Lisinopril 10mg
What it does

Relaxes blood vessels so your heart does not have to work as hard.

Common side effects
Dry cough Dizziness Tired
Ask your provider
  • · Should I take this in the morning or at night?
  • · What should I do if I miss a dose?
Who ORIS is for

For the moment just before Google.

The questions you'd ask a friend who happened to know medicine.

A worried parent
"My toddler's rash hasn't faded in 3 days. What should I watch for?"
ORISPlain-language guidance + a clear list of when to call the pediatrician.
Someone reading their chart
"What does 'incidental finding, clinically insignificant' actually mean?"
ORISTranslates the report into one sentence, then explains the words.
A first-time patient
"I've never had a colonoscopy. What happens, step by step?"
ORISWalks them through the visit, calmly, in their own language.
A caregiver at 2am
"Mom's blood pressure is 168/95. Is this an emergency?"
ORISFrames the threshold, asks the right follow-ups, escalates when needed.
Built around you

Six principles, always on.

Every answer ORIS gives is shaped by the same quiet rules. Empathy first. Privacy by default. Clarity over confidence. And the wisdom to say, "this is a moment for a clinician."

Empathy
Clarity
Signal
Safety
Privacy
Calm
ORIS
Clear boundaries

What ORIS is, and what it isn't.

ORIS is
  • A guide that helps you understand health language
  • A way to organize questions before appointments
  • A tool for learning what to ask next
  • A grounded source for general health information
ORIS is not
  • A doctor or licensed clinician
  • An emergency or crisis service
  • A diagnostic tool
  • A replacement for treatment or prescriptions

If you're experiencing a medical emergency, please call your local emergency number or seek immediate care from a licensed clinician.

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