MedIntel Clinical Profiling
The hospital-grade clinical layer. EMR-rigour, designed for doctors.
- Stack
- Next.js · Supabase · Self-hosted
- Audience
- Hospitals, polyclinics, regional health authorities
- Status
- Live · selling perpetual licences
- Year
- 2026
Hospitals in Tanzania (and the wider region) have spent the last decade buying clinical software that nobody on the ward actually uses. The interfaces were designed in another country; the workflows assume patient throughput unfamiliar to a regional clinic; the licence model bills per-seat in a foreign currency. MedIntel Clinical Profiling is the response — a hospital-grade clinical layer designed *here*, for the people who actually fill it in at 4 p.m.
Nine clinical modules on a single Supabase project: patients, encounters, vitals flowsheet, problems, allergies, medications, SOAP notes, QR bedside pairing, and a tamper-evident audit trail. Doctors sign their notes; vitals roll up into trend charts; the same record reads correctly from a workstation, a tablet at the bedside, or the MedIntel mobile app the clinician already carries in their coat pocket.
Deployment is the unusual part: the licence ships onto the hospital’s own Supabase project, on a local domain, with the hospital owning the data. We don’t hold their records; we don’t even get a copy. Maintenance is pay-as-you-go, billed per day, only when we’re needed.
The demo runs with a realistic single-day clinic dataset: encounters across cardiology, paediatrics, and antenatal, critical-allergy alerts that gate prescribing, and a working vitals flowsheet you can scroll back through. Six pre-seeded patients let visiting clinicians click through their own specialty in five minutes.
Sister product: the MedIntelconsumer app is given to the hospital’s clinicians as part of the same licence — same brand, same AI, two purpose-built surfaces.
Next step
Want to see this with your data?
A 30-minute walkthrough is usually enough. We’ll log in and show you the system from every seat — head, teacher, parent, pupil — and tell you honestly what would need to change.