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Savety is a digital health platform for patients, families, doctors, pharmacists, and emergency responders. It is currently live in Egypt and positions itself as designed for the MENA region. Its goal is not to replace hospital electronic medical records, but to make personal health information “travel with the patient”: medications, conditions, allergies, blood type, documents, prescriptions, and visit information are centralized in a patient-owned profile.
The platform centers on personal medical profiles and emergency access. Patients can create a profile and allow doctors to view their full medical history via a QR code, unique ID, or shared link. An emergency QR code can be placed on the phone lock screen, enabling first responders to view blood type, medications, allergies, and emergency contacts without logging in. On the doctor side, clinicians can access patient profiles, issue digital prescriptions, and add visit notes; pharmacists can view profiles to verify prescriptions. Savety also supports emergency alerts for family members, notifying them when the emergency QR code is scanned.
The website repeatedly highlights “free profile creation” and “set up in 3 minutes,” and states that Savety can be used in a browser without downloading an app. This makes it relatively friendly for elderly users, chronic-disease patients, and people with lower digital literacy. However, the site does not disclose paid plans, doctor-side pricing, institutional editions, or commercial billing rules, so long-term costs and the business model remain unclear.
Savety explicitly mentions end-to-end encryption, patient-owned data, and a commitment not to sell information. It also allows patients to control who can access their data, when they can access it, and to revoke access. The terms further state that after an account is deleted, personal data will be removed from the system within 30 days. However, the platform also emphasizes that patient-entered data is not verified by Savety, and that Savety is not a medical device, an official electronic medical record, or a clinical decision support system. The site does not disclose compliance certifications such as HIPAA, ISO, or SOC 2.
Its strengths lie in clearly defined use cases: unreadable prescriptions, missing emergency information, scattered medication-interaction data, and elderly people living alone whose medical history may be unknown to responders. The QR code and no-login emergency access design is particularly well aligned with emergency scenarios. The drawbacks are that the product still appears to be in a validation stage, with no disclosure of third-party integrations, APIs, hospital-system connectivity, payment methods, or enterprise deployment options. It is best suited for chronic-disease patients, people with complex medication regimens, families of elderly people living alone, doctors’ clinics, and pharmacies looking to trial such a tool.
Access from mainland China is unknown, and payment methods are not disclosed. Since Savety primarily serves Egypt and the MENA region, it does not provide information on Chinese language support, local hospital-system integration, medical insurance, or compliance adaptation. Chinese users may want to prioritize local internet hospitals, hospital patient portals, or built-in medical emergency card features on mobile operating systems as alternatives.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on savety.net official site.
savety.net is an Egypt SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach savety.net directly.