Condition-Specific Navigation

Choose your Navigator

Each Navigator is built for a specific condition using research, patient community insights, and clinical documentation patterns relevant to that diagnosis. The framework structure stays consistent. The lens changes.

Select the condition that best matches your current navigation burden. If you live with multiple conditions, start with the one creating the most system friction.

If you have more than one condition: You only need one Navigator to start. The framework transfers across conditions once you understand how it works. Begin with whichever condition is causing the most uncertainty in care decisions right now.


2026 Releases

Available Navigators

The initial lineup includes both common conditions with high patient volume and rare conditions with significant navigation challenges.

All programs use the same six-month structure and framework design. The difference is in the condition-specific examples, documentation patterns, system dynamics, and tool calibration.

Status definitions: "Available now" means enrollment is open. "Coming soon" means content is in development. Join the notification list to receive timing updates as programs launch.

  • Hemiplegic Migraine Navigator

    First release
  • Endometriosis Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Chronic Migraine Navigator

    Coming soon
  • POTS Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Long COVID Navigator

    Coming soon
  • PMDD Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Fibromyalgia Navigator

    Coming soon
  • PCOS Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Interstitial Cystitis Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Vulvodynia Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Gastroparesis Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Hidradenitis Suppurativa Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Vestibular Migraine Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Navigator

    Coming soon
  • Mast Cell Activation Syndrome Navigator

    Coming soon

Additional Navigators in planning: Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME/CFS), Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, Trigeminal Neuralgia, and others based on community need.


Decision guidance

How to choose if you have multiple conditions

Many people navigating chronic illness manage more than one condition. You do not need a separate Navigator for each. The framework is designed to transfer once you understand how it works.

Start with the condition that currently demands the most from you: Which one requires the most appointments? Which one creates the most documentation burden? Which one generates the most confusion or credibility challenges with providers?

That condition becomes your lens for understanding how healthcare systems operate. Once you have built the framework using that lens, you can apply the same structure to your other conditions without repeating the full six-month program.

Framework transfer in practice

What stays the same across conditions

Pattern Map: The structure for recognizing what repeats remains consistent. The specific patterns change.

Documentation Filter: The decision framework for what to document stays the same. The clinical details differ.

Engagement Thresholds: The boundary-setting approach transfers directly. Your capacity constraints may vary by condition.

Continuity Tools: Appointment Anchors and Decision Ledgers work the same way regardless of diagnosis.

If your conditions require different specialists or have distinct system dynamics, you may eventually want condition-specific Navigators. But one is sufficient to start.


Your condition isn't listed

Framework still applies

If your condition is not yet available as a Navigator, you can still use any condition-specific program as a template. The system dynamics — documentation drift, credibility challenges, continuity failures, referral friction — operate similarly across chronic conditions.

Choose a Navigator for a condition with overlapping system patterns. Invisible conditions share credibility dynamics. Rare conditions share referral barriers. Cyclical conditions share pattern recognition challenges.

Example: If you have a rare autoimmune condition not yet covered, the Hemiplegic Migraine Navigator addresses rarity, invisibility, and emergency department misinterpretation in ways that transfer to other rare neurological and systemic conditions.

Condition request

Request a future Navigator

The Navigator lineup expands based on community need, research availability, and navigation burden. If your condition is not listed, you can submit a request for future development consideration.

Requests are prioritized based on patient volume, system complexity, and availability of research and patient community insights. Not all conditions will be developed, but all requests inform portfolio planning.