Doctors don't have time. You don't have the training. AI doesn't get tired.
Get Started See Sample ReportModern medical records can run hundreds—even thousands—of pages. Imaging reports, lab results, specialist notes, discharge summaries, medication lists. It's all documented.
But here's what actually happens:
Your primary care doctor sees 30 patients a day and skims the 2-page summary. The specialist reads the referral note and their own exam findings. The ER doctor focuses on the acute problem.
Nobody reads the whole thing. Nobody connects the dots across 6 months of records.
That's not incompetence. That's reality. And that's where DPI comes in.
When my spouse received a concerning neurological diagnosis with a grim prognosis, I did what any engineer would do: I gathered all the medical records and tried to understand what was really happening.
Years later, the dire prediction never came true. So what actually happened?
I ran the records through systematic AI analysis and discovered something important: Medical records contain the answers, but they don't always tell the story doctors think they're reading.
Some doctors had actually gotten it right—even during the chaos of COVID. Others went down diagnostic tangents that were wrong but harmless. And the catastrophic prognosis? Based on incomplete reasoning because key findings were buried in a 900-page hospital discharge summary.
The correct information was there all along. On page 247. In a radiology report. That nobody mentioned.
This is where AI excels: reading everything, forgetting nothing, connecting findings across hundreds of pages that no human has time to synthesize.
I built DPI because I wanted to see the medical record analysis that should have happened the first time: systematic, unbiased, reproducible, and thorough.
Processes 100-1,000+ page records that humans can't realistically review. AI doesn't skip pages, doesn't get tired on page 673 where critical information might be buried.
Links findings from radiology (page 247) to labs (page 89) to specialist notes (page 531). Identifies patterns across time that span multiple documents and providers.
Files are processed and anonymized on your computer before any AI analysis. Your original medical records stay on your machine. Only anonymized data is sent for analysis.
You don't need to be a doctor to use DPI. Clear explanations, visual timelines, and plain-English summaries make medical information accessible.
What takes hours manually takes minutes with DPI. Upload documents, run analysis, get results. Pay only for what you use.
Pre-engineered dual-pass analysis methodology with bias correction. Same documents = same methodology every time, not dependent on how well you prompt.
View a real sample analysis report showing multiple hypotheses, evidence analysis, confidence levels, and recommended next steps.
View Sample ReportI've been writing software for many, many years. I've built systems where failure wasn't an option: defense electronics, stock market trading platforms where milliseconds and millions of dollars matter, and mission-critical communications systems.
I've built software for schools, media companies, advertising agencies, and financial institutions. I ran my own consulting firm for years, delivering custom systems for clients who needed software that simply couldn't fail.
When you've worked on systems where lives or fortunes depend on your code working correctly, you learn to build software right. You learn to think through edge cases, handle errors gracefully, and design for reliability.
But I'm not a doctor. I'm not selling you healthcare software, and DPI doesn't claim to replace medical professionals.
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I built DPI for people like me: intelligent, technically-minded individuals who want to understand their own health or support loved ones, but who feel overwhelmed by the complexity of medical information.
When my family needed help making sense of hundreds of pages of medical records, I applied five decades of problem-solving experience. DPI is the tool I built because I needed it—and built it with the same engineering discipline I'd bring to any mission-critical system.
This isn't a startup's MVP thrown together in a few months. This is software built by someone who's been solving complex problems since before personal computers existed.
DPI is not a medical device. It does not diagnose, treat, or provide medical advice.
Think of DPI as an intelligent research assistant that helps you organize and understand medical information—not as a replacement for professional medical care.
Always consult qualified healthcare providers for medical decisions.
Start with 10 free credits. No subscription required.
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