Story · Home + Telehealth
A normal morning with UrineSense at home
Press play to hear a gentle, one-minute walk-through of a normal morning with UrineSense — from a quick bathroom visit to a calm telehealth check-in. It’s a simple story, not medical advice, meant to show how quietly UrineSense fits into everyday life.
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Step 1 — Quick bathroom visit
The user finishes using the toilet. UrineSense quietly samples the VOC “plume” as it rises—no strips, no cups, no extra steps.
Hands-free · ~5–10 seconds of sensing
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Step 2 — Private health reflex
On their phone, the user sees a simple status: hydration, kidney stress, and early pattern changes compared to their baseline.
No diagnoses · Early, directional flags
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Step 3 — Telehealth follow-up
Because today’s pattern looks different, the user taps “Talk to a clinician”. A telehealth provider sees the same summary and starts a secure video or chat visit.
FHIR-based handoff to telehealth partner
UrineSense · Home device view
UrineSense · Home
Today · 07:42 Hydration OK · Kidney watch (mild)
VOC fingerprint compared to your personal baseline — not a diagnosis, but an early, private signal just for you.
Hydration Normal range · Slightly trending down vs. last week. Consider drinking more water this morning.
Kidney stress Mild elevation vs. your usual pattern over the last 14 days. Flagged for telehealth review (not emergency).
Pattern history 3 subtle “yellow” readings in 10 days — enough to justify a quick telehealth check-in, not a trip to the ER.
Hydration vs baseline
Stable · 7-day view
Within your personal range
Kidney stress vs baseline
Mild ↑ pattern
Flagged for review
Curious what “VOC fingerprint” looks like?
Telehealth · Example conversation
Dr
Dr. Alvarez
Telehealth clinician
Status: Reviewing UrineSense summary…
Morning! My UrineSense app says “Kidney watch (mild)” today. Should I be worried?
You · 07:45
You
Dr
Thanks for reaching out. I can see your last 2 weeks of UrineSense trends — it’s not an emergency, but I do see a pattern worth discussing.
Dr. Alvarez · 07:47
Dr
Let’s go over your hydration, medications, and any symptoms. If needed, I’ll order lab tests or imaging. UrineSense is our early “heads-up,” not a replacement for full diagnostics.
Dr. Alvarez · 07:48
That sounds good. I’ve been a bit dehydrated and my blood pressure meds changed last month.
You · 07:49
You
Dr
That might explain part of the pattern. I’ll send you a follow-up plan and, if needed, a lab order so we can double-check your kidney function.
Dr. Alvarez · 07:51
What the clinician sees:
• A simple UrineSense summary (hydration, kidney stress, patterns) mapped to FHIR Observations.
• Your recent trend line, not raw sensor noise.
• Enough context to decide: reassure, adjust behavior, or order further tests.
Explainer video storyboard (5 scenes)
  1. Scene 1: Morning bathroom, soft music, UrineSense glowing subtly near the toilet.
  2. Scene 2: Phone lockscreen shows “New UrineSense check available” and a calm “Hydration OK · Kidney watch (mild)” status.
  3. Scene 3: Split-screen: left = simple trend charts; right = tap on “Talk to a clinician”.
  4. Scene 4: Telehealth clinician view with the same summary, explaining next steps in plain language.
  5. Scene 5: User smiles, closes the app, and a closing line: “UrineSense — a digital reflex of your own health.”