Online storage for your medical files. X-rays, MRIs, op reports, lab PDFs, surgery history, implants. You hold the keys. Doctors drop new files in straight from their PACS, EHR, or inbox — and any future doctor opens the whole thing in one click. MyChart doesn't actually store your X-rays. We do.
Scroll to see a scan, second by secondMost of us have a patient portal. Most of us have had a surgery. Almost none of us can pull up the actual files when we need them — the X-ray image, the op report PDF, the implant card photo, the anesthesia record.
The reason is structural. MyChart and Apple Health Records pull lab values and medication lists. They don't pull the imaging files. Those sit in PACS (the radiology storage system) and almost never get exposed in the patient portal. So when a new specialist asks for your shoulder MRI, your only options are: drive to the hospital, request a CD, wait days. Or ask the previous doctor's office to fax it. In 2026.
Imprint fixes this in the most boring possible way: once you've gotten a file out of any hospital system, drop it in here. It lives forever, on every device, and any future doctor opens the whole archive in one click. Better still: send the next doctor a link, they drop their X-rays in straight from their workstation. You never have to chase the same file twice.
Patient hands the QR over in person — or emails/texts the link if the doctor is at a workstation. The card resolves to imprint.health/r/<token> either way.
Phone: native camera detects the QR and opens the URL. Desktop: doctor clicks the link in their email/Slack/text. No app, no login on either side.
Allergies, blood type, current meds, emergency contact. The information needed if the patient can't speak for themselves.
Tier-2 opens: full surgery history, anesthesia detail, implants, X-rays, op-report photos. Every unlock is logged.
Drag from anywhere on the desktop, or tap-photograph paper from the phone. Tagged "provider-attested," signed with the doctor's name and facility, audit-logged forever.
The card is a URL. They open it however makes sense — scanning the QR with their phone at the bedside, or clicking the link you sent on their workstation where the X-rays already live. Same record, same audit log, same patient.
Phone scan of your QR (in person), or one click on a link you emailed/texted them (at their desk). Same URL, no app, no login on either side.
X-rays out of PACS, op reports from the EHR, lab PDFs from their inbox — drag from anywhere on the desktop. Or tap-to-photograph an op note from their phone.
Tagged "provider-attested," signed with their name and facility. Audit-logged forever. You see it the second they hit save.
Five years later, hand them the same QR or the same link. They see exactly what was done, by whom, with what — including the X-rays.
What an EMT or ER doctor sees the moment they scan. No PIN required. Designed for the case where you can't speak for yourself.
You give the doctor a 4-digit PIN to unlock the full surgery history, X-rays, op reports, and the rest.
Surgery is the headline. The rest comes along for free, because once you have a card, you might as well carry it all.
Every X-ray, MRI, lab result, op report, prescription. Doctors drag them in, you keep them for life. Searchable, organized, never lost.
Every procedure with the surgeon, facility, date, and full op note. Doctor types this once at the time of surgery, you keep it forever.
Type, agents, reactions, family history. Bound to each surgery so the next anesthesiologist isn't guessing.
Every device ever placed, with manufacturer, model, serial, and MRI safety. Across all brands.
Doctor photographs the op note, implant card, or X-ray. Stored on your card for life.
Name, DOB, blood type, height, weight.
Drug, food, environmental. With reaction severity.
Current meds with dose, frequency, prescriber.
Chronic and acute, with onset dates.
With manufacturer and lot number.
DNR, healthcare proxy, organ donor.
Existing options solve fragments. None solve "a medical record the doctor opens on whatever device they're already at."
| Stores X-rays / MRIs / op reports | Works across hospitals & vendors | Patient-controlled | No app for the doctor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple Health Records | Labs & meds only — no imaging | Only connected health systems | Yes | N/A (read-only on patient side) |
| MyChart / patient portals | Reports yes, imaging files almost never | One hospital system only | Hospital-controlled | Login required, per-portal |
| MedicAlert / Knock ID | Allergies + EC only | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Manufacturer records (Stryker, Medtronic) | Single device only | One brand only | Manufacturer-controlled | Paper |
| Imprint | Yes — drag-drop any file, any format | Yes — vendor-neutral, hospital-neutral | Yes | Yes — link or QR, no install |
Imprint is patient-controlled by design. The data is yours. We never sell it, never share it, never see it without your action.
4-digit PINs are hashed server-side with PBKDF2-HMAC-SHA256 and a per-record salt. Even an admin can't read your PIN.
Tier-2 unlock attempts are rate-limited per IP and token. After 5 wrong PINs in 15 minutes, the endpoint refuses until the window rolls.
Each scan, unlock, and provider edit is appended to your audit log with timestamp, doctor name, and facility. You see it in real time.
Patient-controlled data is the same legal model as Apple Health Medical ID and MedicAlert. No BAA needed for the consumer product.
Standards-friendly: FHIR export on the roadmap. Your record isn't trapped on our servers.
Imprint is a record-keeping tool, not a medical device. We don't diagnose, treat, or recommend.
The consumer product is patient-controlled, which is the same legal model as Apple Health Medical ID or MedicAlert. You enter your own data; you choose who to share it with by handing over a QR. No HIPAA Business Associate Agreement is needed in that flow.
For the B2B version, where hospitals issue Imprints at discharge or device companies bundle them with implants, we sign a BAA with the covered entity and run standard HIPAA controls.
No. It's a record-keeping tool. It does not diagnose, treat, or recommend anything. It carries patient-entered and provider-attested data, like a notebook.
Apple's Medical ID is locked behind iPhone unlock and doesn't carry surgical detail, op reports, X-rays, or implant info. Imprint is a full medical record across all those categories, accessible without unlocking the patient's phone, on iPhone or Android.
No. The card is just a URL. They reach it however makes sense for the moment: phone camera scanning your QR at the bedside, or clicking a link you emailed/texted on their desktop where the X-rays already live in PACS. Either way, the same webpage opens. They read Tier-1 immediately, unlock Tier-2 with your PIN, and add records by dragging files in or photographing paper. No login, no download, no install.
The card lives on the server keyed by your account, not on the phone. Sign in on a new phone, your QR and record are right there. You can also rotate your share token at any time, which invalidates the old QR.
The digital pass works today. NFC physical cards are on the roadmap — same product, just a wearable form factor. For v1, the Apple Wallet pass and the QR in the app cover the moments that matter.
Open the app, get your card in 60 seconds, hand it to your doctor. They type once. You keep it for life.
Open the app →