
The patient is
stable-ish.
You shouldn't be.
An AI clinical knowledge assistant built for ER & critical care nurses. Evidence-based answers on drips, protocols and codes — in the seconds you actually have.
The clinical brain
in your scrub pocket.
Designed around the questions you actually whisper at 3 a.m. — not the ones the textbooks were written for.

Rapid recall under pressure
Ask in plain language. Get the dose, the algorithm, the differential — in under two seconds.
Drug references that don't lie
Push-dose pressors, drip rates, contraindications. Cross-checked against current guidelines.
Interactive simulation scenarios
Branching ACLS, PALS and RSI sims you can run between shifts. Decide, get scored, see the rationale.
Evidence-cited answers
Every reply ships with the source — ACLS, AHA, UpToDate, peer-reviewed studies.
Shift-aware history
Your last 12 questions, one tap away. Pick up where you left at handoff.
HIPAA-minded by design
No patient identifiers required. Conversations stay on-device when possible.
The questions
you actually ask.
Real scenarios. Real protocols. Real answers — not a 40-page PDF you'll never scroll through during a code.
"Adult cardiac arrest, V-fib refractory to two shocks."
Continue CPR. Epinephrine 1 mg IV q3–5 min. Amiodarone 300 mg IV bolus, may repeat 150 mg. Check H's & T's.
"Rapid sequence intubation, weight 72 kg."
Etomidate 0.3 mg/kg (~22 mg) + Rocuronium 1.2 mg/kg (~85 mg). Pre-oxygenate. Apneic oxygenation 15 L NC.
"Norepinephrine drip, central line, MAP < 65."
Start 0.05 mcg/kg/min. Titrate q5 min by 0.02–0.05. Cap typically 1 mcg/kg/min. Add vasopressin at 0.5 mcg/kg/min.
"DKA, glucose 612, K+ 3.2, bicarb 10."
Hold insulin until K+ ≥ 3.3. Start 0.9% NS bolus 15 mL/kg. Replace K+ 20–40 mEq/L in fluids. Recheck BMP q2h.
Sample outputs · verify with current institutional protocol before use

Built by nurses,
for nurses.
Stable-ish is shaped on the floor — every prompt, every workflow, every shortcut comes from working ER and ICU clinicians. We test against real shift questions, not Q-bank trivia.
"I trained ten years for the moment. Stable-ish reminds me of the dose in the eight seconds I have left."
"It feels like asking the smartest charge nurse on the floor — except she's awake at 4 a.m."
"Drug references that actually cite. Finally."
