co-op.care
A guided walkthrough

See it work — one family, start to finish.

Follow one family from the hospital discharge that triggers it to the verified outcome a payer trusts. Every step links to the live product — this is the real thing, not a slideshow.

Arthur and Maya are an illustrative family. The funding amounts are real for a qualifying household. The outcomes are the benchmarks we're built to hit — not yet results. co-op.care is Boulder-first and pre-scale, and says so.
01

The moment

Arthur, 78, is discharged after a fall and a three-day stay. His daughter Maya lives in Denver and works full-time. This is the 30-day window where nearly one in five patients lands back in a hospital bed — and where care actually finds people.

The care-transition gap
02

Assess — free, five minutes

Maya answers a few questions about Arthur. co-op.care finds what the family already qualifies for and never claimed: VA Aid & Attendance, Medicaid self-direction, and a letter of medical necessity that unlocks the family HSA. The dollars are real — this is the part that delivers value before anyone pays anything.

Run the free assessment
03

Fund — the unlock

The letter of medical necessity generates and a physician reviews it; the HSA opens to pay for Arthur's care; the ComfortCard makes it spendable. A number Maya didn't know existed — here is specifically what sharing the assessment enabled that nothing else could.

See the savings & the card
04

Deliver — the thirty days

A vetted neighbor and a care conductor are matched for the post-discharge window. Medications reconciled in plain language, the follow-up booked and attended, the home made safe, warning signs watched by someone who knows Arthur. Maya follows it all from Denver on the family dashboard — peace of mind, not another phone call.

Open the family dashboard
05

Prove — the ledger

The readmission that didn't happen, written to a verified record: Omaha-scored benefit, mapped to FHIR, every clinical step physician-attested. This is the part nobody else returns — the number a hospital, a plan, or an area agency on aging can actually trust.

See the avoidance dashboard
06

Own — the part that can't be extracted

The neighbor who cared for Arthur holds equity in the cooperative, not a gig wage — which is why she stays. Arthur's family owns its data and can leave with everything. The one layer a venture-backed competitor structurally cannot copy.

Own a founding share
For a health plan, hospital, or area agency on aging

Same story, from your side of the table.

You refer the patient at discharge. We deliver the in-home last mile you can't staff for. You get fewer 30-day readmissions and the verified outcome ledger back — priced against the readmission you already pay to avoid.

See the care-transition guarantee