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FAQs – How the App Works, Safety & Security
ProMeTheUS uses guideline-based clinical algorithms to support routine management of chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, asthma, and COPD. Patients enter structured health data, which is monitored over time to provide recommendations, reminders, and escalation when appropriate.
No. ProMeTheUS is designed to support and extend routine care, not replace emergency services or specialist care. Human oversight is built into the system, and escalation to a healthcare professional occurs when clinically indicated.
Chronic disease management follows well-established clinical guidelines. ProMeTheUS embeds these guidelines directly into the care pathway and includes safety thresholds, alerts, and human review where required.
Recommendations are generated using standardized clinical guidelines (such as ADA, AHA, GOLD/CTS) applied through structured algorithms. The platform prioritizes safety, conservative escalation, and auditability.
ProMeTheUS is built using privacy-first principles aligned with HIPAA (U.S.) and PIPEDA (Canada). Data is encrypted in transit and at rest, access is role-restricted, and personal health information is never sold.
ProMeTheUS is being developed with regulatory compliance in mind. Regulatory submissions and approvals (e.g., FDA, Health Canada) are planned and staged. No claims of regulatory approval are made prior to authorization.
Healthcare systems are optimized for episodic visits, not continuous care. Chronic diseases require ongoing, guideline-based management that current models struggle to deliver consistently.
While publicly funded, millions of Canadians lack access to a regular primary care provider. Coverage does not guarantee timely or continuous care.
Telehealth digitizes appointments, but it does not replace structured, longitudinal disease management or consistent application of clinical guidelines.
Uninsured and underinsured patients in the U.S., unattached patients in Canada, rural populations, and those with multiple chronic conditions face the greatest barriers.
Yes. Most diabetes, hypertension, asthma, and COPD care follows well-established guidelines that can be safely managed with structured algorithms and appropriate oversight.
Aging populations, workforce shortages, rising costs, and increasing chronic disease prevalence are pushing healthcare systems beyond sustainable capacity.
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