Caring for someone is rarely
a one-person job.
Two parents share a child's asthma care across two homes. A spouse keeps track of what was taken today. An adult child checks in on a parent's blood pressure. Invite the people who help, and everyone stays on the same page — you decide what each person sees, one part at a time, and you can take that access back whenever you like.
Three taps, one code.
Bringing someone in takes about a minute, so help is never held up by setup. Open Sharing. Tick the parts you want to share — like your child's Medications, Symptoms, or Calendar. Choose whether they can view only, or view and edit too. Then tap Create.
A short code appears, like K7QM-3FBX-9TJP. Text it to your child's other parent, or to whoever helps. They open the same app, type the code, and the shared view shows up in their list of people.
There are no accounts to link and no emails to verify. The code itself does the work, and it expires once it's been used.
Share access
Share the symptom log, keep the diary private.
Help can be specific without being all-or-nothing. Tick the boxes for what you want to share, and the other person sees only those parts — nothing else. Share your child's Medications but not your own Mood notes. Share everything. Or, to start, share nothing at all. Here is the full set you can pick from:
Sharing means neither of you has to keep asking "did you log it?" — you both stay in the loop. Here is the kind of note Valeska might show two parents sharing a child's care:
Both of you logged this week — mornings and evenings covered.
You added 5 entries and your co-parent added 4. Nothing slipped through.
Mia’s inhaler doses stayed on track across both homes.
6 days running, logged from two different phones.
Different people, different things shared.
The other parent
You both care for the same child across two homes, so nothing should fall through the cracks at a handoff. Share Medications, Symptoms, and Calendar — and let each other add notes. When one of you gives the inhaler, the other can see it.
The adult child
You want to keep an eye on a parent without taking over. Share their Health, Medications, and Calendar, and keep it view only. You can see if Mom's blood pressure is creeping up, or if she missed yesterday's dose — without reading her Mood notes. Care, without crowding.
The doctor
You want your care team to see the full picture, not just a snapshot at the visit. Share your Symptoms, Medications, and Questions, look only. Your doctor sees the same summary you'd hand over at an appointment — but between visits too. Handy for a specialist or care coordinator who follows you closely.
A home screen built for helping.
When you're helping someone, you don't need their logging tools — you need to know how they're doing at a glance. So when you open a shared view, you see a caregiver home of your own: how today's Medications are going, a quick look at Symptoms, and anything that needs a closer look.
- An alert when a dose hasn't been taken
- An alert when a tough symptom gets logged
- A nudge if nothing's been logged for a day or so
- A clear badge showing whether they can view only, or view and edit — so there's never a guess
- Questions you add wait for the other person to okay them before they reach the doctor
You and Mia’s other parent haven’t missed a dose this month.
A shared 30-day streak. 🔥
Caring for Glenda
Alerts
You are always in control.
Take it back anytime
If something changes, you're never stuck. Tap Stop sharing on a person's card, and their access ends the next time they open the app — usually within seconds. There's no approval to wait for and no need to explain.
A promise to keep it private
So you can share without second-guessing it, everyone agrees in the app to keep your health info private before they can see a thing. It's routine for a doctor, and it carries real weight for family who'll see things they wouldn't otherwise.
A clear "you're helping" banner
Everyone stays honest about whose care this is. A helper always sees a banner at the top, like "Viewing Glenda · View only," so they never lose track of whose info they're looking at, or whether they can add to it.
The people who help are part of the story.
Most health apps act like one person does it all. Valeska knows better. The person writing things down and the person helping with care are often not the same — whether that's two parents, a couple, or a wider family. This is built to make room for all of you, with you deciding who sees what.