A patient-owned health record on every phone. AI that reads paper. Built with Bangladeshi doctors, for the way care actually happens here.
Healthcare record infrastructure was built for wealthy countries. The other 70% of the world still runs on paper, memory, and plastic bags. The problem is not slow adoption; the infrastructure simply never existed.
Bangladesh: 170 million people. Zero portable health records.
No access to basic health services.1
WHO reports that 4.5 billion people worldwide cannot access the health services they need, let alone a digital record of them.
Of global health spending goes to LMICs.2
Low and middle-income countries carry 56% of the world's disease burden and house half its population, yet receive just 3.2% of global health spending.
Of global EHR investment goes to North America.3
The entire digital health market is concentrated in wealthy countries. LMICs, home to most of the world's disease burden, receive a fraction of a percent.
We started in Bangladesh because that's where we're from and that's where we know. The infrastructure we're building is designed to travel.
Doctors write prescriptions, patients check records, hospitals run wards, all from the phone in your pocket. Built for the places where the phone is the computer.
You can't digitize healthcare with a data pipe when there's nothing on either end. We built the entire system.
Voice-to-record, prescriptions, patient timeline, clinical insights
Learn more →Lifetime records, family management, appointments, blood donation
Learn more →Ward management, discharge summaries, growth tracking, multi-role access
Learn more →These aren't features we built. They're outcomes that become inevitable when the infrastructure is there.
Every past diagnosis, medication, and allergy. No more starting from scratch.
On her phone. No papers to lose. Any hospital, any city, any doctor.
Discharge reports and growth tracking, automated from existing data.
Aggregated, anonymized surveillance. Policy driven by evidence.
The same record on the patient's phone, the doctor's ward floor, and the AI that summarises both.
We partnered with BMU to digitize one of the most complex pediatric departments in the country. Our custom portal handles high-volume patient intake, tracks critical longitudinal growth metrics, and automates discharge workflows.
Bangladesh's Personal Data Protection Act. Fully compliant from day one.
End-to-end encryption on all clinical data at rest and in transit.
Every data access is logged immutably. Full forensic accountability.
Granular permissions for doctors, nurses, admins, and department heads.
Built on the global standard for healthcare data exchange. Patient records can move between systems, hospitals, and countries.
See what PulseNote delivers for your role, or download the app and start today.