Experimental research prototype. AI-generated, not reviewed by a clinician. Not medical advice. Read the full disclaimer
For people with a heart condition

Prepare a clearer summary for your heart appointment.

ECG, echo, discharge letters, blood pressure records, medication adjusted yet again: cardiovascular care produces many small documents in many places. Continuum condenses them into one page your cardiologist and GP can both work from.

1
Page from ECG, echo and years of blood pressure
2 min
Reading time for your doctor
0
Diagnoses or recommendations
4
Languages: EN, DE, FR, ES

What goes in, what happens, what your cardiologist gets.

No portal, no software for the clinic. You upload, Continuum organises, you bring one page.

What you bring
Cardiology report ECG and echo Hospital discharge letter Blood pressure records Medication plan with changes Your symptoms, in your words guided interview, optional

Photos or PDFs, complete or not. Whatever you have is enough to start.

What Continuum does
Continuum
  • Reads every page
  • Orders everything by date
  • Flags what changed recently
  • Never diagnoses, never recommends treatment

No account needed to try it. Your files are deleted after processing.

What your cardiologist gets
Doctor brief 1 page · A4 · printable
Heart failure diagnosis 2023
Hospital stay Oct 2025
Dose adjusted May 2026
Weight up for two weeks RAISE THIS FIRST
From your records: two kilos since the last visit
Breathlessness 6/10
From the symptom interview: after one flight of stairs, resting helps, worse for a month

When it helps most.

  1. Cardiologist and GP, one shared picture

    Between hospital, practice and check-ups, medication lists drift apart. The brief shows the current state, with every change dated.

  2. After a hospital stay

    The discharge letter is written for doctors, and the follow-up sits with your GP. The brief carries the plan into the next appointment, including what should be checked when.

  3. Swelling, breathlessness, fatigue

    The optional symptom interview records when they occur, what triggers them and how they changed, in the words a doctor listens for.

  4. The dose and follow-up question

    Diuretics up, beta blocker down: the suggested questions at the end of the brief help you ask what the change means for daily life, and when the next check is due.

Three questions, already prepared.

At the end of every brief there are three questions you might raise. They are derived from your history, not from a recommendation. For this journey they might look like:

  • Is the weight gain of the last two weeks something to act on?
  • What does the dose change mean for daily activity?
  • When should the next blood test and check-up happen?

They are prompts, not instructions. Cross out what you do not want to raise.

Preparing for someone else's appointment?

Many briefs are prepared by a daughter, a son or a partner. Continuum works the same way when the records are not your own: gather, upload, bring one page.

How caregivers use Continuum

Your records stay yours.

Try it without an account: your files are deleted as soon as the brief is built. If you save a brief, it is stored AES-256 encrypted, and you can delete it, or your whole account, in one step. GDPR followed.

More on security

Your first brief, in three steps

1

Gather what you have

Photos of ECG and echo reports, the blood pressure log, the medication plan. Gaps are fine.

2

Upload, and answer a few questions if you like

Continuum reads the files. The symptom interview is optional and skippable at any point.

3

Print it. Bring it.

One A4 page, in the language of your doctor: English, German, French or Spanish.

Prepare for my next cardiology appointment

No account needed to try it. Your files are deleted after processing.

Continuum does not diagnose and does not adjust cardiac medication. Those decisions belong to your cardiologist and your GP. We organise the record they decide from.