Make sense of it

You shouldn’t need a medical degree to read your mother’s lab report.

Hand ComfortCard the paperwork — the labs, the discharge summary, the after-visit notes — and get it back in plain English: what’s normal, what’s worth asking about, and the exact questions to bring to her doctor.

Designed to run privately on your iPhone · a licensed physician stands behind anything clinical · free to start.

A worked example

The same report, twice.

On the left, the lab report as it arrives. On the right, the way ComfortCard reads it back to you — and the questions worth bringing to the visit.

The report, as it arrives
Hemoglobin A1c6.4 %
LDL cholesterol142 mg/dL
eGFR (kidney)58 mL/min
TSH (thyroid)3.9 mIU/L
Vitamin D22 ng/mL
Potassium4.1 mmol/L
In plain English

Most of this is fine. Three numbers are worth a conversation: her A1c (6.4%) sits right at the edge of what doctors call prediabetes, her LDL cholesterol (142) is above the usual target, and her kidney number (eGFR 58) is mildly reduced — which can quietly change what medication doses are safe. Her vitamin D is on the low side and usually easy to correct. Thyroid and potassium look normal.

Bring these to her doctor
  • Is her A1c something to treat now, or to watch — and should her diet or medication change?
  • Given her cholesterol, what heart-risk target should we aim for?
  • Do any of her current medications need adjusting for her kidney number?

A sample report, not a real person. Numbers and ranges are illustrative — every lab and every body is different.

Try it · a common value at a time

Tap a lab value you’ve seen.

The ones that show up on almost every report — what they mean, roughly where they usually sit, and the one question worth asking about each.

General education, not a diagnosis. Reference ranges vary by laboratory, age, and health history — always read yours alongside the treating physician.

Where this happens

Private by design — not pasted into a chatbot.

Making sense of a family’s health means holding the most personal thing there is. So the reading is built to stay close to home.

On your device

The reading is designed to run on your iPhone with Apple Intelligence. Your parent’s file isn’t posted into a public chatbot to get an answer.

In your family’s card

What you learn is saved to your ComfortCard, where the people you’ve trusted can reach it — not on our servers to sell. We don’t sell your inputs, ever.

With a physician behind it

Anything clinical — a Letter of Medical Necessity, a directive, a care decision — is reviewed and signed by a licensed physician. The reading helps you ask; a doctor decides.

The honest boundary

ComfortCard helps you understand the paperwork and ask better questions. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace your mother’s doctor. When something needs a medical decision, a licensed physician makes it — or we point you straight to hers. The goal isn’t to answer the question for the doctor. It’s to make sure you walk in already knowing which one to ask.

The next report doesn’t have to be a mystery.

Start the free card, add the people who help, and the paperwork stops piling up unread. No credit card, 90 seconds.