mejo is for you, you and you.
- Ryan Sheedy
- 5 days ago
- 3 min read
When we first started building mejo, our vision was simple, to make the lives of individuals, caregivers and families a little less chaotic and a lot more connected.
Over time, I started noticing a pattern in conversations with individuals and families who hadn’t yet tried the app.
When I’d ask why not, they’d say things like:
“My child doesn’t take medication.”
“We don’t use medical devices.”
“We don’t have a rare disease.”
“We’re already pretty organized.”
All completely fair answers.
But after spending a few minutes listening, I’d often realize they were already doing so many of the things mejo was built for just in notebooks, folders, or scattered across texts and emails.
That’s when it hit me: mejo isn’t just for people with rare complex medical needs, it’s for anyone navigating life and care.
The everyday realities of caregiving
Care doesn’t always look like hospital stays or complex diagnoses. Sometimes, it looks like a mom managing school accommodations through an IEP or 504 Plan. A dad keeping track of therapy goals and progress notes. A family who has to fill out the same forms for every new provider. Or an adult child trying to keep up with their parent’s medications, appointments, and insurance paperwork.
Even families who describe themselves as “healthy” are often managing a surprising amount of invisible care work. They might be organizing vaccination records for school, keeping a list of allergies and emergency contacts for summer camp, or tracking milestones for a premature baby or a child with developmental delays.
They might be managing Medicaid or Medicare renewals, coordinating specialists, tracking symptoms like seizures, migraines, or pain episodes, or keeping records for chronic illnesses such as asthma, diabetes, or arthritis.
Some use mejo to prepare for doctor visits, to share information with school nurses, babysitters, and respite caregivers, or to send updates to grandparents and extended family. Others use it to organize physical therapy notes, feeding schedules, or behavioral data for clinical trials.
And we even hear from people using mejo in unexpected ways like storing progress from speech or occupational therapy, tracking medication side effects, preparing forms for Medicaid waiver programs, organizing documentation for insurance appeals, or simply keeping everything ready “just in case.”
It’s not just healthcare. It’s life care. And that’s what mejo helps with.
What mejo actually does
mejo brings everything together in one secure, easy-to-share place — so families can stay organized, confident, and connected.
With mejo, you can:
Store and update health info, documents, and care notes.
Track progress, symptoms, and milestones over time.
Share concise summaries with teachers, providers, or new care team members.
Simplify communication across family and support networks.
Reduce the mental load that comes with remembering it all.
It’s about spending less time explaining, repeating, or searching and more time focusing on what matters most.
Because every care story deserves support
Our team often says: if you’ve ever filled out the same form twice, mejo can help.
Because whether you’re managing a chronic condition, school plans, aging parents, or a short-term recovery, you’re still navigating a care journey.
There’s no “threshold” to qualify for organization, connection, or peace of mind.
That’s why we say: mejo is for everyone.
For caregivers. For parents. For patients. For families who just want one place where it all comes together.
A final thought
Every time I talk with a new user whether they’re in the NICU, at home with a teenager, or helping an aging loved one I’m reminded of one simple truth: Care doesn’t fit into neat boxes.
It’s dynamic, emotional, and ongoing.And that’s exactly why mejo exists to help make it a little easier.
Because mejo isn’t just an app. It’s a reflection of all of us learning, adapting, and caring together.

