Health belongs to the patient.
Technically, legally, morally.
For thirty years, the digitalization of healthcare happened around institutions. Hospitals bought their software. Clinics bought theirs. Community doctors bought theirs. Labs too. Pharmacies too.
With each acquisition, someone gained a customer. And with each acquisition, the patient lost a piece of themselves — a result locked in a system that speaks to no other, a prescription lost when they changed doctors, an X-ray they cannot show anyone without physically retrieving it.
This fragmentation is not an accident. It is a direct consequence of a model where software is sold to the institution, never to the person it concerns. Whoever pays decides the architecture. And in this world, nobody paid for the patient.
My Data My Care reverses this balance.
We are building the first health passport where the patient is the customer, the owner, and the center of gravity. Everyone else — doctors, practices, hospitals, labs, insurers, states — are partners that plug into you. Not the other way around.
This is not a marketing promise. It is an architectural decision: your decryption key is on your phone. We do not have access to it. No jurisdiction, no publisher, no investor can compel us to unlock what we cannot unlock.
It is also a legal decision: our terms of service engrave commitments that our competitors would not dare sign. Zero data resale. Full portability in one click. Pricing increase cap. Contractual uncoupling between our modules.
And above all it is a moral decision. We believe a digital healthcare system that does not return ownership to those it primarily concerns is, eventually, a system that betrays itself.
We have been consulted. We have been diagnosed. We have been operated on. It is time to also be owners.