Your life is a continuous story. Your health record should be too.
We named our platform Curie not merely as a tribute to a pioneer, but as a commitment to a profound philosophical goal: making the invisible, visible.
Marie Curie dedicated her life to understanding the fundamental nature of matter. She discovered elements that had existed since the dawn of time but remained hidden from human sight. She taught the world that the most powerful forces are often those we cannot see.
In modern healthcare, the most powerful force is no longer a single treatment or technology — it is the continuity of evidence. It is the invisible thread that connects a childhood fever to a mid-life diagnosis; a genetic marker to a lifestyle habit.
Currently, this thread is broken.
We live our lives in chapters, but our biology is a continuous narrative.
Today's healthcare system treats the human body as a series of disconnected episodes. A patient is a collection of fragmented snapshots: a blood test from 10 years ago, an X-ray from 5 years ago, a prescription from yesterday. We treat symptoms in isolation because we lack the context of the whole.
We are losing the story of our own lives. We are missing the grand arc of human pathology — the subtle, chronological patterns that reveal the true state of our health.
Curie exists to repair the narrative. Our vision is to construct a complete, verified view of human health for an entire lifetime.
We are building the Chronological Health Chain—a single, immutable, and self-sovereign timeline that captures every signal your body generates, from birth to the present day.
We move beyond static files to a living timeline. By unifying clinical records with daily biometric data (wearables, sleep, movement), we create a digital twin that evolves as you do.
A story depends on its truth. Through our "Verification Handshake," clinicians cryptographically sign every data point, transforming noise into a pristine, verified history.
By seeing the whole, we understand the specific. We give AI the complete context it needs to predict disease before it manifests, moving medicine from reactive to predictive.
"Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood."
Illness is often feared because it is misunderstood—it arrives as a surprise, seemingly out of nowhere. But often, the clues were there, hidden in the fragments of the past.
We are re-inventing patient data to remove that fear. We are gathering the scattered elements of your life into a single, cohesive whole, so that for the first time in history, we can truly understand the complete human story.