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MyHealthPal

Making health information feel less overwhelming.

2026

MyHealthPal product mockups across doctor dashboard and mobile screens

MyHealthPal started as a healthcare product ecosystem: a patient-facing mobile app paired with a doctor dashboard. The goal was simple, but hard to execute well -- help patients understand their health information, while giving providers a cleaner way to review patient context.

A lot of healthcare tools feel either too clinical for patients or too simplified for doctors. MyHealthPal was built around the middle ground: clear enough for patients to trust, detailed enough for providers to act on.

The idea

The patient app focused on turning health questions, symptoms, and records into something easier to navigate. Instead of forcing users to search through disconnected information, the app acted more like an AI health companion -- guiding users through next steps, explanations, and useful context.

The doctor dashboard gave providers a separate view. It was designed for scanning, reviewing, and understanding patient information quickly without burying the important parts under clutter.

App screenshot placeholder

Mobile app screens

What I worked on

My role was focused on frontend leadership, product structure, and UI execution. I worked across the patient app and dashboard experience, helping turn the idea into screens that felt usable under real hackathon constraints.

I helped coordinate how the frontend connected with backend logic, made product decisions around what information should appear first, and shaped the interface so the experience felt calm instead of overwhelming.

Key features

  • Patient-facing AI health companion experience
  • Doctor dashboard for reviewing patient context
  • Clear separation between patient and provider views
  • Health information organized around clarity and action
  • Interface patterns designed to reduce confusion, not add more of it

Dashboard screenshot placeholder

Doctor dashboard screenshot

What was hard

The hardest part was making the experience feel trustworthy. In healthcare, a polished interface is not just about visuals. The hierarchy has to be careful. The wording has to be calm. The product cannot make users feel like it is guessing.

That meant the frontend had to do more than display information. It had to create structure around uncertainty, urgency, and clarity.

What I learned

MyHealthPal taught me how important product judgement is when building with AI. The AI layer matters, but the interface around it is what decides whether people actually understand and trust the output.