ComfortCard lives on your iPhone the way Apple wants apps to — private by design, and on your Home Screen today. It draws a line most health apps won’t: Apple Intelligence handles the easy part — finding the card, opening it, saying it out loud — while anything medical stays with a licensed physician, never handed to a chatbot.
On-device by default. Your family’s health information is never used to train an AI, and never sold. The Home Screen app works right now; Apple Wallet and voice access are on the way.
“All in one place” shouldn’t mean “piled on someone’s server.” ComfortCard is built on the vault Apple already gives you — and adds the two things Apple can’t.
Apple keeps health data on the iPhone, end-to-end encrypted — Apple itself never sees it. ComfortCard is built on that foundation: the record stays yours, and it leaves with you if you go.
How the layers stay separate →Apple Health is built for one person. Caring for someone you love needs a shared picture — the people you trust, on the same page, with the permissions you set. That family layer is what Apple doesn’t have.
See a family card →Apple Intelligence can organize and summarize — it should never decide care. A licensed physician reviews and signs anything clinical: the directive, the letter, the plan. A person is accountable, not a model.
See the directive flow →Today ComfortCard holds the plan, the documents, the directive, and the emergency card. Coming with the app: direct Apple Health sync, so vitals, medications, and records flow in on-device — with your permission, and only yours.
One card for the whole picture — the plan, the documents, the people who help — meeting you where your family already is.
Add ComfortCard to your Home Screen and it opens full-screen, like any app — one tap from the lock screen to your family’s wallet, with the essentials there even when service is spotty. No App Store, no download.
How to add it →The identity and emergency card as a real Wallet pass: on the lock screen, ready to hand a paramedic the essentials in seconds, and it updates itself when the plan changes — no reprinting, no digging.
See it in Apple Wallet →“Open Mom’s ComfortCard.” “Call her care team.” Built on App Intents — the way iOS 27’s Siri reaches an app — so the request opens the right view while the sensitive details stay inside ComfortCard.
Why that matters →The convenience of a modern AI phone, without pretending an algorithm can carry a medical decision. Two layers, kept honestly apart.
Fast, on-device, private — for the things that should be effortless.
A human clinician — not a general chatbot — for anything that carries weight.
Apple doesn’t sign the agreements that let a general AI handle protected health information — so ComfortCard doesn’t ask it to. Your mother’s health is never handed to a chatbot without a doctor in the loop.
Apple processes what it can on the phone itself, using Private Cloud Compute only when needed. ComfortCard is built the same way.
Apple’s privacy model →Your family’s information isn’t a product. The data is yours, it leaves with you if you go, and the co-op that serves you owns the rest.
How membership works →AI drafts; a licensed physician reviews and signs. The accountable name on anything clinical is a person, not a model.
The co-op behind it →Thirty seconds, no App Store, nothing to download. Do it on the phone you carry, or the one you set up for the person you care for.
Prefer to look before you set anything up? Open Eleanor’s demo card — a real member card, no signup. When you’re ready, set up your own.
The plan, the documents, and the people who help — in one place, on the phone that’s always with you. Free to start; a physician behind the care when you need one.