Hi Indie Hackers,
I’ve been helping a client/friend with the rollout of AI Doctor Notes, and I wanted to share it here because the build is quite indie in spirit.
The problem with medical appointments today is the high friction, most people walk out trying to remember complex instructions, medications, and next steps while dealing with the stress of the visit itself. Generic voice memo apps don't structure this data well, and privacy is usually a big concern.
We wanted to see if we could build a highly secure, patient-focused tool that organizes the entire experience.
AI Doctor Notes is an app that:
The core focus here was absolute privacy and creating a frictionless workflow for real patients, parents, and caregivers managing family healthcare.
I'm curious to get your thoughts on the patient-first workflow. For those managing care for parents or kids, what features would make you feel most secure using an AI tool in a clinical setting?
Check it out here: https://aidoctornotes.app/
I like that the product isn't trying to replace dosctors, it's helping patient better understand and remember their care. That feels like the right direction for AI in healthcare.
This is a strong problem, especially because the user is not just “someone taking notes.” It is usually a patient, parent, caregiver, or family member trying to remember important medical instructions under stress. That makes the trust layer much more important than in a normal productivity app.
The workflow makes sense: prep before the visit, capture during the visit, then turn the visit into a clear after-care summary. I’d make that patient/caregiver angle the center of the product, not the AI angle. “AI doctor notes” explains the function, but it also sounds generic and clinical, almost like a feature category rather than a product people would trust with sensitive family health information.
For this category, the name matters a lot. Privacy-first healthcare products need to feel safe, memorable, and human before users even test them. Lyriso.com would carry this direction much better because it feels more patient-friendly and care-oriented, while still being broad enough if the app expands beyond visit notes into medication reminders, family care history, or caregiver workflows.
I’d seriously pressure-test the name before more users, app assets, and healthcare trust signals lock around AI Doctor Notes. The product is sensitive enough that naming is not cosmetic here — it directly affects whether people feel safe trying it.