What matters isn't what we built, but why we built it
Some things, once you see them, you can't unsee. When you see nurses staying late to organize medical records, when you see doctors spending less time with patients because of paperwork, when you see important patient information buried in endless data... you ask: Is this right? We don't want to change the world. We just want to make these unreasonable things a bit more reasonable.
Healthcare professionals should spend time on what truly matters
Make technology serve people, not the other way around
These ideas might be a bit idealistic, but we think they're worth sticking to
Healthcare professionals trained for years, not to do paperwork
“So we let AI handle the repetitive stuff, letting professionals do professional work”
Who says AI has to be cold? The best technology is when you don't feel it's there
“Our system knows when to remind and when to stay quiet”
Every piece of data represents someone's health. This isn't a game
“So we're extra careful to ensure important information isn't missed”
Doing the right thing is never simple, but it's always worth it
“We'd rather go slow and make sure every feature is actually useful”
No grand plan, just solving problems one step at a time
Saw too many unnecessary hassles in healthcare, thought we could do something
Spent lots of time talking to healthcare workers, learned problems were more complex than expected
Built our first working system, though it still had many imperfections
Continuously adjusted based on user feedback, learned something new with each update
Established WeeMed Technologies, seriously treating this as our business
Listed with Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs as a Social Innovation Organization
SMART on FHIR certified by MOHW, setting a new benchmark for healthcare logistics
The principles that guide our early-stage company