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Owned by Bill

Know Your Health

9 members • $4/month

Use awesome AI research power to understand medical tests! But you only click buttons. 100% private, secure. Plain-language explanations. Free trial.

Memberships

Skoolers

167k members • Free

15 contributions to Know Your Health
Welcome New Members!
This group is not concerned with making a ton of money or getting a thousand members. So, why do I say that? Because the only applicants for membership, with a four exceptions, have ben people whose goal was not to help anyone else with their health, or even to investigate the outstanding apps we offer. It was to get a client for their "community building" skills, etc. There are many of those here in Skool with proven records. I can go to them if I have need of making this group bigger. If you are a person who is interested in your health or that of others, and you would like to find out what it's like to have the entire world of AI resources answer your health questions and explain your medical tests, this is the place for you to do those. If you want to get me as a client to pay you, please go somewhere else. Thanks.
0 likes • 9d
@Lynne Vella Have you gotten a lot of these? People who've been on Skool for a week and they've joined 40 groups, all of which have under 20-30 members? I'm tired of them. Auto reject!
0 likes • 9d
Good plan. Same here, basically, except if they're joining 20 communities within their first week I don't give them a chance. Doubt that they'll miss me.
Easy Medical Terms App
Do you know these medical terms? cardiovascular, pulmonary, respiratory, gastrointestinal, itching, neurological, hypertension, diabetes, pneumonia, asthma, arthritis, sepsis, neuralgia, neuropathy, pancreatitis, benign prostatic hyperplasia, , COPD, angina, bumps, trial fibrillation, gastritis, GERD, osteoporosis, fibromyalgia, migraine, epilepsy, thyroiditis, quinsy If you do, you're a rare individual, or maybe educated in medical terminology. If you don't, you can copy them and paste them all into MedeXplainer LIte, our free medical term helper. You can also paste in any medical list or document. The app will show green highlighting for the words it can define for you. For purple-highlighted words, you'll need the Pro app. (See below.) Try it! Ps. If you want to get an explanation of ANY medical document, (or a detailed explanation of every word on this list), put it into our Pro app, MedeXplainr Pro. Free to use for the rest of June! Password is "aihealthmay26." Premium users have unlimited use of the app and two others.
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The Doctor Visit … How Was it?
So, you went to the doctor and had your physical or wellness check. Wellness Check: That's what they call it when you're old. It seems they are expecting to find multiple problems, just from your age. So what they're doing in the "wellness check" is finding out if that collection of problems adds up to anything they can pill you for or treat you for or even — !! — cure? The doctor finishes, talks a little bit, says you're okay but watch how much of this or that you eat, and says he'll see you next time. Do you get any real, actionable information? That depends on the doctor, unfortunately, and doctors are people. Some are competent and interested, some uninterested but competent, and some both uninterested and incompetent. …so usually, no real info is gotten. But then, he orders a Blood Test and Lipid Panel, and that's where you can find the TRUTH. Why does he order those? Two reasons: They are high profit, and they take almost none of his time. (Yes, I know I'm waxing cynical.) But the real story is in the test results, which the doc can read, no problem. But what about the rest of us? We can't read them and understand their meaning. Not without help. Help is here. The MedeXplainr app takes your uploaded test document and returns a plain English explanation and amplification of every medical term, what it means, why it's important, why you need to know about it, what it signifies if it's high or low, and if it's serious enough to ask the doctor about. That's a lot of good information, and it's all yours for the asking in MedeXplainr. In about sixty seconds. Look in the Classrooms.
2 likes • 13d
@Lynne Vella Exactly right, Lynne! That’s pretty much how they do it here now too with the HMO‘s and all those things. And for Medicare recipients like Myself, that’s how it works. And what you said is all we get – – no explanation no amplification no things that we should ask the doctor about… That’s why I’m hoping more people will take advantage of what you offer and what I offer on my know your health group.
I Don't Speak Doctors' Technical Language ... Do You?
Every occupation has its own jargon, right? in Skool, we have it: Members, lurkers, posts, boost, cover image, discovery, etc. When we read them in context, they're pretty clear. Some, even for newcomers! But, reading medical information? Many words used in medicine are impossible! We never study or learn them as regular people. But we're expected to read a test result and react to it. How do we do that if we don't understand the medical jargon? That's the first problem. Sure, it's not hard to figure out if you're a user of AI, like ChatGPT or Grok. But if you aren't an AI user? And you don't want to take the time to learn it? That's the second problem. I've worked a way around both problems. It's a simple app named MedeXplainr, as in, "medical explainer." When you use it, you get a report, a plain English translation from jargon to regular everyday language. You can read it, understand it, and react appropriately to it. Let me urge you to try it out with your own medical test report(s). If you're a medical professional, you probably don't need it ... but your patients do!
2 likes • 15d
@Lynne Vella Thanks, Lynne! I'm still trying to figure out the best way to present it. I've put the apps on the general web as well, at the domain XplainrHub.com, with a new website and different offer. If you get a chance to look at it, please give me any feedback, impressions, etc.
3 likes • 15d
@Lynne Vella Thanks! Working on a video this week.
Member Request Fulfilled: More Coverage by MedeXplainr Lite (free app)
Wouldn't it be nice to be able to communicate directly with an app's creator? Here, you can. Just post about something going wrong, as Lynne did this morning about our free app. In response, I've increased the database of terms in the Lite MedeXplainr app from 283 up to 423. It now includes the top 300 prescription drugs in USA and conditions they are prescribed for. Try it out! It's free for all members and available to everyone at this link: https://xplainrhub.vercel.app/apps/medexplainr/ . No password needed. If you go direct, without joining us, please consider joining for free -- this group will have a lot to offer! If this app doesn't meet your needs, the MedeXplainr Pro almost certainly will; it uses the entire internet medical knowledge base to provide your answer. @Lynne Vella -- the second graphic shows what your results would be following this update. Thanks for the earlier note about the app's shortcomings!
Member Request Fulfilled: More Coverage by MedeXplainr Lite (free app)
0 likes • 24d
Yes. Already exists. See DM's. - OOPS, I can't DM you for some reason. Please DM me and and I'll reply with info. The app, itself, doesn't download to your phone -- the app is in the cloud only. But youc an log in and use it with your phone.
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Bill Cory
3
32points to level up
@bill-cory-6836
Alive in Colorado. I'm 78. Write apps, books, doing Skool, drive a Lyft rideshare. Have wife, "kids" in Texas and Colombia, 6 g'kids. Healthy? ~Yeah

Active 11h ago
Joined Jun 2, 2026
Colorado USA