Ojava Doctor (the AI assistant)
Ask questions about your records, prepare for a visit, or draft a clinician-ready packet, grounded in the data you’ve accepted.
How it works
Ojava Doctor reads your accepted records (with consent) to give context-aware, educational answers about your own data. It’s a feature that helps you understand your health, not the product’s identity, and not a chatbot you should treat as a clinician.
It stays focused on your health and wellness, and that focus is the point. Because it can see your own labs, wearables, sleep, recovery, training, nutrition, and medications over time, it connects the dots across your data in a way a generic chatbot you paste a single file into cannot. If you ask it something unrelated (writing code, trivia, or legal and financial questions), it will gently point you back to how it can help with your health instead.
It also sees the same computed wellness estimates your Insights screen shows, your readiness and recovery score, fitness age, training load, sleep debt and consistency, activity streak, resting heart rate and temperature trends against your own baseline, your week-in-review digest, habit signals from your own logs (how workouts, fasting, and wellness sessions line up with your sleep and recovery, associations only, never causation), biological age estimate, and how your markers sit against general typical ranges, so its guidance matches what you see on screen instead of re-deriving numbers from raw rows.
Modes
Modes help you turn a question into something useful:
- Triage a question and figure out what context matters.
- Prepare for a visit by assembling the right records and questions.
- Draft a care-request packet for a future licensed review.
Visit-prep drafts pull together the available record packet, including accepted results, current medications, and recent symptoms when they are present. If labs or imported clinical results are withheld by consent or review state, the draft says that plainly instead of filling in a value.
Boundaries
Every chat shows a clear legal disclaimer. The assistant explains and prepares; it does not decide.
Important