It all started with a simple question—one that people either avoided or answered with hesitation:
“Do you have a family doctor?”
We first noticed it in casual conversations with friends and colleagues. Whenever the topic of healthcare came up, people would either change the subject or give vague, reluctant answers. Some would nod but quickly move on, while others admitted, almost in a whisper, that they didn’t have one.
At first, we thought it was just a coincidence, but the more we paid attention, the clearer it became—many people either didn’t have a family doctor or were struggling to find one. And yet, for some reason, no one openly talked about it. It was almost as if not having a doctor was a secret they were ashamed to admit.
Curious, we started asking more people—colleagues, neighbors, even strangers in casual chats. The responses were eye-opening. Some had been waiting months for a doctor, stuck on endless clinic waitlists. Others had given up entirely, relying on walk-in clinics or emergency rooms for basic care. Even those who had family doctors often didn’t know if their doctor was taking new patients, leaving their friends and relatives to struggle in silence.
That’s when it hit us: Finding a doctor shouldn’t be this hard. In a country that prides itself on universal healthcare, why do so many people feel disconnected from primary care?
This problem wasn’t just an inconvenience—it was a massive gap in the system. And if no one was fixing it, we decided we would.
That’s how Remdy was born.
Healthcare should be simple and available to everyone. We break down barriers so that finding a family doctor is effortless, fast, and frustration-free.
No more secrets or guesswork. We provide clear, accurate, and up-to-date information so patients and doctors can connect with confidence.
We embrace technology to solve real problems, not just for the sake of it. Our goal is to make healthcare more connected, efficient, and future-ready.
Healthcare is about people, not just systems. We listen, adapt, and continuously improve to serve both patients and medical professionals with empathy and care.