The Second Brain for Behavioral Health.
The chart closes. The file archives. The patient walks out. The facility moves on to the next admission.
No one hears the 2am craving. The spiral. The breakup. The missed dose. The patient is alone with a record the system forgot.
It's locked in a database, in a facility, behind a portal the patient forgot the password to six months ago.
Treatment doesn't fail because the science is wrong.
It fails because the connection breaks.
Connect the EMR you already use. The wiki writes itself. The agent learns on top of it. Every interaction — in-facility, out-of-facility, forever — makes the next one better.
Universal plug-in. Read-only. No migration, no replacement. Any FHIR-compliant EMR by design.
One living page per patient — their brain. Compiled from EMR, agent chats, vitals, clinical events. Recompiles as new signal arrives.
Every patient gets their own agent, built on top of their wiki. It walks out the door with them — and keeps learning. Day 31. Day 400. The patient updates the wiki with what's changing. The agent grows alongside them. Forever.
The LLM-Wiki is the patient's living record — drawn from the EMR, their agent conversations, vitals, and every clinical event. Every EMR captures what happened. Beora turns it into something the patient can use — today, and long after discharge.
A patient tells the group "I'm fine." They tell their phone "I didn't sleep" at 2am. That 2am message is the one your team needed.
Beora gives every patient their own agent — a concierge for schedule, program, and care team. Safe. Scoped. Always redirects clinical to humans. Every conversation compounds into the wiki.
The patient asked for grounding, not escalation. The agent didn't wake the floor. The team saw the pattern in the morning — not a week later.
The wiki belongs to the patient. The agent belongs to the patient. When they walk out the door, both walk out with them — and they keep going. The agent keeps learning from every day after discharge. The patient keeps their wiki updated with what's changing in their life — new jobs, new sponsors, new stressors, new wins. Six months from now or six years from now, it's not a reunion. It's a conversation that never stopped.
Chart archived. File closed. Patient walks out with nothing.
Wiki keeps compiling. Agent keeps learning. Patient is never alone with a record the system forgot.
De-identified messages from patients who used their Beora agent long after discharge. These are the moments nobody would have known otherwise.
"just wanted to tell someone. 30 days sober today. i didn't think i'd make it this far."
"mom called. i almost picked up the phone and said yes to drinks. didn't. came here first."
"my daughter said she's proud of me. i don't even know what to do with that."
"i relapsed. i don't want to call them. can you tell sarah in the morning?"
"6 months. i came back to this app tonight and it remembered everything."
"first day at the new job. nervous. i know you'll tell me to breathe so i'm breathing."
"can't sleep again. work. same as before. guess some things don't change."
"almost a year. i miss rehab sometimes. weird to say."
"one year."
Every one of these messages is a moment the legacy system would have missed entirely.
This is behavioral health. Every AI output ships through Human-in-the-Loop (HITL) — tagged [AI-GENERATED], dropped in a review queue, and only goes live after a clinician signs off.
Autonomy is earned per output type, on evidence. Once the AI hits a high enough success rate, that workflow graduates to full automation. One strike — back to full review.
[AI-GENERATED]
UNTIL REVIEWED
Named-provider consent. Re-disclosure warnings on export.
BAA-covered cloud. Append-only audit logs.
The wiki follows the patient, not the facility.
Every AI change is a diff with a reviewer and a reason.
Every feature tuned against real shifts and real discharges.
"A patient I hadn't heard from in six months walked back in. Her agent had been with her the whole time. I read six months of her life in ten minutes — not a reunion, a handoff."
"The agent catches what patients only say when no one's looking. It changed what we talk about in group."
20 minutes. A walk-through of the wiki, the agent, and the discharge-day moment that stops being a cliff.