A screener captures your vitals. A licensed reviewer rates your susceptibility across nine disease categories. You get a calm report that says what we saw, and what to do next.
Early Pulse separates the people who measure from the people who interpret. Your vitals are captured by a screener, then read by a licensed reviewer who never sees who you are.
At a clinic, kiosk, or home visit, a trained screener records your blood pressure, heart rate, SpO₂, glucose, weight, and a short intake.
Your reading is anonymized and routed to a licensed medical reviewer. They rate susceptibility 1–10 across nine disease categories, with reasoning for each.
No alarms, no celebrations. Just plain language: what was in range, what is worth watching, and what the reviewer suggests next.
Every role has its own view of the data — and its own limits. Screeners can submit but not look back. Reviewers can read but not see your name. The boundaries are the point.
See your screening reports and read your reviewer's notes in plain language.
Log a patient's vitals from the kiosk or clinic. Submission is one-way and anonymized.
Review your queue of anonymous cases and rate susceptibility, one disease at a time.
Every report ranks nine disease categories from most to least worth attention, paired with the reviewer’s reasoning and a short next step. Numbers come with context, never alone.
Your blood pressure trended upward over the last three readings (118/76 → 124/82 → 128/86). On its own, this is not concerning. Combined with the resting heart rate pattern and the family history you noted at intake, it is worth a second reading in two weeks.
What I’d do: Book a 15-minute follow-up reading. Skip caffeine for 30 minutes before. If the second reading is still above 130/85, bring this report to your primary care doctor.
If you have a question that isn’t here, your clinical advisor will answer it the first time you log in.
Create a patient account to claim your reports. Already screened at a clinic? Sign in to read what your reviewer wrote.