Legacy conversations made valuable.

Your story becomes your advance care plan, your family's treasure, and the knowledge that helps others find their words.

Start My Story Read Stories

A SolvingHealth brand. Billable ACP encounters (CPT 99497 / 99498).

Every story gives someone else permission

Real people. Real conversations. The ones most of us haven’t had yet.

James, 42. Chicago. 2 min read

“I’m not dying. But I watched my dad die without anyone knowing what he wanted. I’m not doing that to my kids.”

Rosa, 68. San Antonio. 3 min read

“In my culture, we don’t talk about death. I’m changing that for my daughters.”

David, 55. Portland. 4 min read

“I’m a surgeon. I’ve seen what happens when families don’t have the conversation. I’m having mine now.”

Aisha, 31. Atlanta. 2 min read

“My baby is six months old. Here’s what I need her to know if I’m not here.”

Robert, 81. Morningstar Senior Living. 3 min read

“I’ve been readmitted to the hospital five times. My daughter started co-op.care because of me.”

Chen, 47. Seattle. 2 min read

“My advance directive is a spreadsheet. My story is everything the spreadsheet can’t hold.”

No forms. No checkboxes. Just your voice.

Three steps from conversation to care plan.

1

Tell your story

Voice, text, or a conversation with our AI listener. There are no wrong answers. Start anywhere — a memory, a fear, a wish, a promise.

2

AI captures what matters

Your narrative becomes a structured care plan. Values, preferences, wishes — extracted from your own words. You review everything before it’s saved.

3

Share or keep private

Public — inspire others. Community — CareGoals members only. Private — family only. You control every word, every audience, every change.

We don’t ask medical questions.
We ask human ones.

Pick one. Read how others answered. Then find your own words.

0 of 6 answered

“Tell me about a time someone you love was sick.”

1,247 answered
How others answered
“My husband Harold was on a ventilator for three weeks. I held his hand every day. The machines were keeping him alive but he wasn’t living.”
Margaret, 74, Colorado
“My dad had a massive stroke. He could hear us but couldn’t speak. We had no idea what he would have wanted.”
James, 42, Illinois
“My mother had dementia for seven years. The hardest part wasn’t losing her — it was not knowing when to let go.”
Rosa, 68, Texas
Show answers from people like me:

“What does a perfect day look like?”

1,891 answered
How others answered
“Coffee on the porch. A long walk with my dog. Dinner with my wife. Nothing scheduled. Nothing urgent.”
David, 55, Oregon
“My daughter’s laugh. That’s it. Everything else is negotiable.”
Aisha, 31, Georgia
“Working on something meaningful. A good meal. Knowing the people I love are safe.”
Chen, 47, Washington
Show answers from people like me:

“What are you most proud of?”

2,034 answered
How others answered
“I raised three kids who turned out kind. That’s more than any career accomplishment.”
Robert, 81, Ohio
“I went back to school at 52. Got my degree at 55. My grandkids call me ‘Dr. Grandma.’”
Margaret, 74, Colorado
“I broke the cycle. My father was absent. I’m present.”
James, 42, Illinois
Show answers from people like me:

“What do you want your grandchildren to remember about you?”

1,583 answered
How others answered
“That I made the best tamales and I always had time to listen.”
Rosa, 68, Texas
“That I showed up. Not perfect, but there.”
David, 55, Oregon
“That I danced at their weddings. Even when it hurt.”
Robert, 81, Ohio
Show answers from people like me:

“What are you afraid of?”

987 answered
How others answered
“Not being here to see my daughter grow up.”
Aisha, 31, Georgia
“Being a burden. Making my family choose between their lives and taking care of me.”
Chen, 47, Washington
“Pain. Not death itself — I’ve made peace with that. The pain.”
Margaret, 74, Colorado
Show answers from people like me:

“If you could tell your family one thing, what would it be?”

2,318 answered
How others answered
“I love you more than I ever knew how to show.”
James, 42, Illinois
“Don’t fight over the house. It’s just a house. Take care of each other.”
Rosa, 68, Texas
“Let me go when it’s time. Don’t hold on for you. Hold on for me.”
Robert, 81, Ohio
Show answers from people like me:

CareGoals conversations are billable ACP encounters

The story IS the advance care plan. AI extracts clinical preferences from narrative. A physician reviews and signs via Altru.care. The conversation you were going to have anyway — now it generates a care plan and a reimbursable encounter.

CPT 99497
~$80 · First 30 minutes
CPT 99498
~$70 · Each additional 30 min

CareGoals is a SolvingHealth Cloud module. Clinical oversight provided by Altru.care.

1,247
stories shared
89
conversations happening now
47
states represented
70%
of Americans want this conversation

The conversation is growing.

You don’t have to do this alone.

Death doulas, end-of-life counselors, and community guides help families navigate what medicine can’t.

What is a death doula?

They’re not medical providers. They’re trained companions who help with the emotional, spiritual, and practical aspects of dying. They help families start the hard conversations, be fully present at the end, and find their way through grief. Think of them as a guide for the journey that no one prepares you for.

Before

Help starting the conversation. Planning what matters. A doula and CareGoals together — so your wishes are heard, written down, and understood.

During

Presence at the bedside. Comfort when words run out. Advocacy for the patient’s wishes — the ones captured in their CareGoals story.

After

Grief support. Legacy preservation. Helping families with what comes next — not just logistics, but finding meaning in the loss.

CareGoals conversations can be shared with your doula, creating continuity between your wishes, your family, and your guide.

Your story matters.

Every story shared gives someone else permission to have the conversation.

Tell your story by voice