Patient-controlled sharing
Patients choose when to share with caregivers. Sharing is meant to support care conversations, not take control away from the person in treatment.
Privacy-first cancer tracker
Soothe Note is built for sensitive treatment-life details: symptoms, medications, appointments, journal notes, caregiver sharing, and visit-ready reports. The goal is simple: help families remember what changed without turning their health story into an advertising profile.
Patients choose when to share with caregivers. Sharing is meant to support care conversations, not take control away from the person in treatment.
Soothe Note is designed around care support, not ad targeting. The website and app messaging should be clear about what is tracked, what is not, and how families stay in control.
Cancer symptoms, side effects, mood, medication details, and private reflections are personal. Soothe Note keeps privacy and consent visible across the product experience.
How Soothe Note fits
Soothe Note is strongest when a patient or caregiver needs a calm place to remember symptoms, medications, questions, notes, and care context. It supports organization and communication, while medical advice stays with licensed care professionals.
Mood, energy, symptoms, medication context, appointments, notes, and questions can stay connected instead of scattered across memory, texts, and separate notes.
Visit-ready reports are built to help patients and caregivers explain what happened between appointments in plain language.
Caregiver sharing is patient-controlled, read-only, and meant to support communication without taking over the patient's voice.
Quick answers
Cancer care details can include symptoms, medication changes, emotional notes, caregiver relationships, and appointment context. Families should know how those details are handled before they trust an app.
No. Soothe Note is not built around selling patient data, advertising IDs, or third-party ad tracking.
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