For clinicians

Better-prepared patients, clearer conversations

Meia Lab helps women organise symptom patterns, timelines, and questions before appointments. It supports clinical conversations. It does not replace them.

Why patients arrive overwhelmed

Many women live with overlapping symptoms for months or years before they can describe them clearly in a short appointment. Fatigue, sleep disruption, cognitive changes, cycle shifts, and stress recovery often appear together, but patients are frequently asked to discuss them as isolated complaints.

When labs look normal but life does not feel normal, patients may leave appointments feeling unheard. Meia Lab was built to help bridge that communication gap.

What Meia Lab helps organise

  • Symptom timelines across weeks and months
  • Connections between overlapping experiences
  • Five Signals summaries that group related inputs
  • Appointment prep briefs with symptoms, questions, and discussion points
  • Exportable summaries patients can share at their discretion

What clinicians should know

Meia Lab is an evidence-informed pattern interpretation tool. It uses structured patient inputs and AI-supported language translation to help patients reflect on their experience. It is not a medical device and does not produce clinical conclusions.

Patients choose what to record and what to share. Meia Lab does not instruct users to ignore clinical care or delay seeking help for urgent symptoms.

Not a diagnostic tool

Meia Lab does not diagnose conditions, recommend treatment pathways, or replace the judgement of qualified healthcare professionals. It is designed to support preparation, reflection, and clearer articulation of lived experience.

How to reach us

For clinical, research, or partnership enquiries, contact clinical@meialab.com.

For urgent or emergency symptoms, patients should be directed to appropriate emergency services. Meia Lab cannot provide urgent medical support.

Clinical or partnership enquiries

We welcome thoughtful conversations with clinicians, researchers, and healthcare partners.