When a parent's health gets complicated, the details scatter: across siblings, across appointments, across memory. CHAMP holds them in one living record you build together, so the weight is shared and the important details stay in one place between visits.
The change in how a phone call goes. The new word that gets lost. The medication that sat untouched on the counter. You see it before anyone with a clipboard does, and then you try to hold all of it in your head until the next appointment, where time is always short.
CHAMP gives that noticing a home. The things you observe become part of the record, ready for the people who can act on them.
History, medications, the everyday changes you notice, kept in one calm place that grows over time and carries forward from visit to visit.
Invite the siblings, the spouse, the trusted few. Everyone sees the same picture, so the weight of remembering is carried together, by everyone, wherever they live.
Walk into the appointment with the picture already gathered. The clinician spends the visit on what matters, and the plan comes home with you.
The attention itself can be part of the care.
Most tools that track a person's health stop at measuring. CHAMP is built on a more hopeful idea from the research Nubellum follows: that paying attention in the right way, staying in contact, writing things down, noticing what is going well, is care in itself. For the person and for the people around them, it can be good in its own right.
CHAMP is a way for a family to stay close on purpose, to turn the care you already give into something steady and shared. The senior is a person in it, with a voice in their own record.
We write CHAMP for a grown daughter looking after a living, capable parent, and for that parent too. The language is plain and warm, the senior can see what is kept about them, and consent and control rest with the family.
What CHAMP holds is private to your circle. It is a place to support care, alongside the clinicians who provide it.
You can begin with whatever you have. Start the record, invite one person, and let it grow from there. Getting started is free.