A doctor's recommendation just landed. Surgery, a long medication course, a treatment plan that doesn't quite sit right. Asha tells you whether to seek another opinion — by running the case through twelve specialty AI agents who each read it from their own clinical lens.
Your dad gets told he needs a procedure. Your mom's specialist suggests a long medication course. Your child's bloodwork comes back ambiguous. The clinical question is whatever the doctor said. The actual question — the one that keeps you up — is the one that comes after:
"Should we get another opinion before we do this?"
Most families spend two weeks of phone calls, second appointments, and a quiet feeling that they don't know what they don't know. Asha is built to take that decision off your plate in fifteen minutes.
Asha doesn't replace your doctor. It tells you whether the panel thinks you should call a second one — and what they'd want that doctor to actually look at.
The panel returns one of two answers: this looks reasonable, no second opinion needed. Or: yes, here are the specialties worth consulting and why.
Twelve AI agents review the same case from twelve angles. When they disagree, you see exactly what concerned each one. That's the diagnostic surface most lay readers can't see.
Every result is inspectable: per-specialty reasoning, evidence references, the questions the panel still has. Your treating physician can read it and tell you exactly where it's right or wrong.
Each agent reviews the same case description from its own clinical lens. None of them is a substitute for a real specialist — they're an AI thinking environment that surfaces specialty disagreements worth pursuing in person.
Each turn includes the chair AI's synthesis. Hard cases trigger a debate round between disagreeing specialists. None of the agents are licensed physicians; the panel produces guidance about whether to seek one, not a clinical opinion.
Asha's AI intake agent asks five to seven questions — what the recommendation is, what the patient's history looks like, what tests have been done. You can talk or type.
Twelve specialty agents independently weigh in. Disagreements get a debate round. The chair AI synthesizes a top-line recommendation.
Either "no second opinion needed" with the reasoning, or "here are the specialties to consult and why" — with full per-specialist reasoning you can share with your doctor.
India-first beta. We'll email you when access opens — once.
No. Asha is an AI panel of specialty agents. None of them is a licensed physician. The panel produces guidance about whether you should seek a second opinion from a real doctor — it does not itself constitute medical advice or a clinical opinion.
Asha runs a fixed panel of twelve specialty agents per case, each reviewing the same facts from a different clinical angle. When they disagree, they debate before the chair synthesizes. ChatGPT is one model trying to be all of them at once. The panel structure is what makes specialty disagreements visible — the moments most worth pursuing in person.
About fifteen minutes end-to-end: five for Ralph (the intake agent) to learn the case, five for the panel to review, and the result lands instantly after that. You can pause and come back; consults persist on your account.
Your case data lives in a private database scoped only to your account. Identifiable details are scrubbed before any external API call. Voice content is processed in-session and not persisted. See our Privacy Notice for the DPDPA-aligned full disclosures.
India-first via TestFlight. Wider availability is on the roadmap. Sign up for early access to be notified.