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Feature 02

Emergency Passport

The sitter, the school nurse, the paramedic at 2am — none of them know your child's protocol. Your Emergency Passport does. Offline, no login, ready the moment it's needed.

Emergency Passport

The card that speaks when you can't.

The sitter. The school nurse. The paramedic responding at 2am. None of them know your child's contraindications, their rescue protocol, or what a well-meaning standard response might miss. Your Emergency Passport tells them — the moment they need it, without a login, even without a signal.

One link or QR code. Everything they need in the first 30 seconds — what to give, what to never give, and who to call.

  • Works offline — no Wi-Fi needed

    Cached on your device. Loads instantly at 2am in a hospital parking garage when cell service is gone.

  • No login for first responders

    The paramedic, the ER nurse, the school nurse — they don't need an account. One link or QR code is all it takes.

  • Always current

    Auto-updates whenever you change a medication or add a new protocol. The card always reflects your most recent notes.

  • Designed for high-contrast reading

    Critical information — what to give, what to avoid — is large, clearly labeled, and unmissable under pressure.

Alex M.

DOB: 04/12/2018 · Age 7

🪪

Diagnosis

Dravet Syndrome (SCN1A)

Rescue — if seizure > 5 minutes

Midazolam 4 mg intranasal

0.2 mg/kg · based on 20 kg · call 911 immediately if no response in 4 min

Maintenance medications

  • Clobazam 10 mg — twice daily
  • Stiripentol 500 mg — twice daily, with meals

⚠ Do not give

Sodium channel blockers — Phenytoin, Carbamazepine, Lamotrigine

Emergency contact

Parent: (555) 000-0000

Updated Mar 2026

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Give the people caring for your child what they need before they need it.

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