
The nearby sibling
You've quietly become the default — calls, rides, refills, worry. It's a lot, and no one else can see how much.
Make the load visible. Hand off rides and tasks with owners, so help is shared instead of assumed.
Caring for an aging parent looks different for everyone helping. Here's how Foveia fits the role you're playing right now.

You've quietly become the default — calls, rides, refills, worry. It's a lot, and no one else can see how much.
Make the load visible. Hand off rides and tasks with owners, so help is shared instead of assumed.

Two time zones away, you only hear the emergencies. You want to help but never know what's already handled.
Open one timeline and know exactly how the week went — then claim something to take off the local sibling's plate.

It all lands on you. There's no sibling to split it with, and nothing remembers the details but your memory.
Let the record do the remembering. Bring in a cousin, neighbor, or aide as a scoped helper when you need backup.

As an aide or neighbor you want to log a visit — without being handed the family's entire private history.
Contribute check-ins and notes within a scoped view. See what you need to help, nothing more.

Mom and Dad have different meds, moods, and appointments — plus a shared household. One thread can't hold all three.
Separate timelines for each parent and a shared household context. Nothing gets crossed or lost.

You just stepped in and don't even know what 'checking in' should cover. Blank-page paralysis every time.
Structured check-ins ask the same questions every time. Open it, fill it in under a minute, done.

Across town or across the country, Foveia keeps everyone looking at the same record — so the next visit, call, or handoff is shared, not assumed.
Each parent keeps a separate timeline and care history. The household holds what they share. Today surfaces only what needs attention now — so nothing important hides inside a single thread.
What needs attention now, computed from rules — not everything that ever happened.
Separate timelines and care histories. Different meds, moods, and appointments stay distinct.
Shared supplies, home safety, documents, and appointments that affect both.
Open, watching, and resolved — tracked across both parents and the home.
Three roles keep contribution easy and boundaries clear — so a trusted helper can log a visit without opening the family's private history.
Sets up the care circle, adds recipients, invites people, and assigns roles. Usually the sibling who started it.
Adds check-ins, concerns, tasks, and appointments — and can resolve concerns. The full shared record.
Contributes check-ins and notes within a scoped view. Sees what they need to help, not the whole history.
Scoped = a helper sees only the recipients and contexts they've been added to.
The families who use Foveia stop relitigating who said what — and start sharing the load.
I'm three states away. Before Foveia I only heard about the emergencies. Now I open the app and I actually know how Mom's week went — and what I can take off my sister's plate.
The group text was chaos. Someone says 'I'll handle it' and it vanishes. Now every handoff has an owner and a due date. The arguing basically stopped.
Our aide logs her visits without seeing our private family notes. That boundary is exactly what we needed — she helps, we keep our privacy.
Invite siblings, your spouse, a remote relative, or a trusted helper — each with the right level of access.