
Sage Healthspan, a digital health company based in the US, has launched a new AI-powered wellness app, now available for free on Apple’s App Store.
The app aims to address gaps in preventative healthcare by offering a privacy-first, on-device AI platform.
The platform helps users interpret their blood work, monitor health trends, and optimise wellness while ensuring data security.
The approach neglects subtle health patterns and early disease indicators, missing opportunities for early intervention.
Sage’s app allows users to upload or photograph lab results directly from their Apple devices, interpreting the data using local AI algorithms without uploading personal information to the cloud.
The platform provides summaries, visualisations, and personalised recommendations, including lifestyle adjustments, supplement advice, or follow-up testing.
Sage Healthspan Media and Communications Lead Megan Haas said: “Instead of waiting for symptoms to appear, Sage empowers users to engage proactively with their health data.
“The AI platform helps transform routine lab work into structured insights, encouraging users to take control of their health trajectory in a secure, comprehensible, and private way.”
Sage’s emphasis on a privacy-first model ensures all health data remains on the user’s device, enabling secure HIPAA-compliant analysis.
In a climate where 78% of healthcare executives prioritise cybersecurity, Sage’s on-device processing offers a practical alternative to cloud-based health apps.
Sage’s AI generates insights across various health and biomarker categories.
The categories include cardiometabolic health, inflammation, blood sugar, autoimmunity, nutrient status, thyroid health, and kidney and liver function.
As users contribute more data over time, Sage builds a personalised timeline for trend detection and wellness optimisation based on longitudinal analysis.
A standout feature of Sage’s platform is its lab test ordering capability, allowing users to independently request advanced biomarkers often excluded from standard panels.
They include cardiovascular indicators like ApoB and Lp(a), fasting insulin and HOMA-IR for metabolic health, thyroid and sex hormone assessments, and nutritional markers.