From the Blog
Emergency health,
explained simply.
Tips, product guides, and real-world stories about why carrying your health information matters — every day, not just in emergencies.
Emergency TipsMay 18, 2026 · 7 min read
Your Garmin Tracks Everything Except the One Number a Stranger Will Need If You Drop Mid-Run
You have a Strava streak, a hydration vest, sub-5:30 pace, and a locked phone in your armband. If you collapsed at kilometre four tomorrow, the strangers who reach you would have no way of knowing your name, your blood group, or who to call. India's running boom has a quiet hole in it. Here is how to close it before your next loop.
Emergency TipsMay 18, 2026 · 8 min read
Nine Delivery Riders Will Die on Indian Roads in the Next Hour. None of Them Will Be Carrying Their Own Name.
India's gig economy is built on the backs of 1 crore plus delivery riders who ride 12 hours a day in rain, heat and traffic, chasing a ten-minute delivery promise made by someone else. They are the most accident-exposed working population in the country, and the system that profits from them has done almost nothing to make them identifiable when something goes wrong. Here is the data, the human cost, and the small thing every Indian household can do about it.
Health DataMay 18, 2026 · 8 min read
Your Parents in India Are Storing Their Medical Records in a WhatsApp Family Group. It Is Time to Admit That Is Not a System.
Their BP reports are JPEGs in a chat. Their ECG is a photo your sister forwarded last Diwali. Their cardiologist's name is in your dad's diary, which is in a drawer, which is in a house six time zones away from you. India has 14 crore senior citizens and a rapidly growing share of them live without their adult children nearby. Here is the gap, and the small thing every NRI family is quietly setting up to close it.
Emergency TipsMay 18, 2026 · 8 min read
You Have CE Level 2 Armour, a ₹40,000 Helmet, and a GoPro Mounted on Your Tank. You Are Still Riding Without the One Thing Every Indian Tour Leader Wishes You Carried.
The Indian motorcycle touring community has spent ten years getting serious about gear. Bullet-grade jackets, knee guards, action cameras, intercoms, GPS units. What it has not done is solve for the moment you go down 200 km from the nearest hospital with strangers around you who do not know your name. Here is the gap, written for the riders who have done Ladakh once and want to do it again.
Emergency TipsMay 18, 2026 · 8 min read
She Landed in a City Where Nobody Knew Her Name, Her Blood Group, or the One Medication That Could Have Killed Her
Every solo traveller carries a passport, a boarding pass, and a phone full of medical apps that are useless the moment they cannot unlock it. This is the story of the gap between leaving home and being truly reachable, and the small piece of plastic that closes it before you board.
Emergency TipsMay 18, 2026 · 8 min read
His Medical History Was Spread Across Nine Apps. On the Evening It Mattered, He Could Not Open a Single One.
The Indian corporate employee is the most digitally documented patient in history and the least reachable in an emergency. Prescriptions in one app, lab reports in another, insurance in a portal, fitness data in a band. This is the story of what happens when all of it is locked behind a face that has gone unconscious, and the one card that makes it irrelevant.
