How It Works
hpathy.ai guides the practitioner through a structured clinical interview — from the patient's presenting complaint to a final remedy recommendation — using classical homeopathic sources and AI analysis.
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1
Enter the Patient's Chief Complaint
Describe the patient's presenting symptoms in as much clinical detail as possible — nature and location of the discomfort, modalities (what aggravates or ameliorates), time of aggravation, mental and emotional state, and any unusual concomitants or peculiarities. The richer the case entry, the sharper the shortlist.
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2
Candidate Remedies Are Shortlisted
The system searches 74,667 rubrics from Kent's Repertory (Publicum edition) and scores remedies by grade weight (plain, italic, bold) across all matched rubrics. The top 3–5 candidates are confirmed by AI cross-referencing with Boericke's, Allen's Keynotes and Clarke's Materia Medica. You can click any remedy badge at any time to view its full Materia Medica profile.
Arsenicum Album (Ars.) 18 Phosphorus (Phos.) 14 Lycopodium (Lyc.) 11 -
3
Answer Targeted Clinical Questions
The AI poses one focused question at a time — always in third person about the patient — to differentiate between the shortlisted remedies. Each question targets a single modality, thermal preference, time of aggravation, or keynote mental characteristic. You have up to 7 rounds of questions.
"Does the patient's anxiety and restlessness tend to be worse after midnight, particularly between 1 and 3 am?" -
4
Receive the Final Recommendation
Once sufficient information has been gathered — or after 7 questions — the AI provides a final recommendation: the most suitable remedy, the key confirming symptoms from the case, standard potency and dosage guidance, and a clinical disclaimer. The recommendation is based strictly on the information provided and the classical source texts; no symptoms are inferred or invented.
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5
Explore the Materia Medica
After the result, click any candidate remedy badge to open its full Materia Medica profile in a tabbed modal — switch between Boericke, Allen's Keynotes and Clarke to compare keynote sections, modalities and characteristics for the same remedy. Available throughout the consultation, not just at the end.
Clinical Sources
| Source | Coverage |
|---|---|
| Four classical repertories (Publicum / Boericke / Boenninghausen / Nash) | 87,853 rubrics · ~962K remedy links · 2,841 remedies |
| Boericke's Materia Medica | 688 remedy chapters · 6,393 clinical sections |
| Allen's Keynotes and Characteristics | 185 remedy chapters · 1,035 clinical sections |
| Clarke's Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica | 1,007 remedy chapters · 21,620 clinical sections |
All sources are public domain. Repertories from the OOREP project (GPL-3.0) and OpenRep FREE; Clarke and Allen's Keynotes from homeoint.org.