When your child is sick, waiting feels impossible.

Late-night fevers. Unanswered portal messages. The moment you’re deciding: urgent care, ER, or wait until morning. We’re exploring a new way for parents to get faster pediatric guidance — including after-hours support and same- or next-day appointments — so you feel supported and reminded that you are loved.

How it could work

  • Designed for parents
  • Built with doctors in mind
  • Optional & transparent
Parent caring for a child
Parent holding sick child
Child resting while parent watches

the problem

When your child feels worse, you’re left deciding alone.

The scariest moments don’t wait for office hours.

  • 2am fevers with no guidance
  • No response from the portal
  • Hold music when you need clarity
  • “Call back tomorrow”
  • Choosing between ER or waiting
  • Second-guessing every decision

You’re not dramatic.

You’re trying to protect your child.

the solution we’re exploring

Clear, practical support for parents when you need it most.

Share symptoms and get a timely reply, so you’re not left guessing what to do next.

Support on evenings and weekends, when questions tend to feel the most urgent.

Access to appointments when your child needs to be seen sooner, not “next week.”

The option to work with your current pediatrician, if they choose to participate.

Paid directly as an additional service. It does not change what your insurance covers.

We’re early. Your honest feedback (even “no”) helps shape how this should work.

Parent watching over child

why this matters

The mental load is real.

Monitoring symptoms. Tracking temperatures. Searching symptoms. Trying to stay calm while something feels off.

  • Less panic spiraling
  • Fewer “what if” thoughts
  • Clear direction, fast
  • Confidence in your next step
  • Support beyond office hours
  • Space to breathe
  • No guessing between urgent care or waiting
  • Reduced late-night Google searches
  • Clarity before symptoms escalate
  • Better communication with your pediatrician
  • Less disruption to work and school
  • Feeling heard, not dismissed
  • Reassurance when something feels off
Devanshu Singh, Founder of Luv Health
Family and healthcare inspiration

Built from lived experience

meet the founder

This mission is personal.

My name is Devanshu Singh — most people call me Luv.

I grew up in a family of doctors. I’ve watched patients sit in waiting rooms anxious for answers, and I’ve watched physicians stretched thin trying to care deeply within a strained system.

After experiencing illness myself, I began asking a simple question: why does getting clarity feel harder than it should?

With a background in AI and as a PhD candidate in political science at the University of Washington, I care about systems — how they work, and how they fail people. Luv Health exists because families deserve something more responsive, more humane.

Before building anything permanent, I want to listen.

Share your thoughts in a short survey
your voice directly shapes what happens next.

faq

Quick answers for parents

Clear, simple details on what we’re exploring — and what we’re not.

An early-stage concept focused on faster pediatric guidance for parents, especially when questions can’t wait.

No. The goal is to support families with faster access and clearer next steps — not replace your doctor.

No. If offered, it would be optional and paid directly as an add-on. Insurance coverage stays the same.

Delayed replies, after-hours uncertainty, and difficulty getting timely appointments when your child is unwell.

That’s part of what we’re exploring — because concerns often show up outside office hours.

If your pediatrician participates, the intent is to keep continuity — the same doctor who knows your child.

We’re exploring guidance and clearer next steps. The exact scope depends on provider participation and design.

Common parent concerns like fever, cough, vomiting, rashes, and “is this urgent?” moments.

Response expectations depend on model and staffing. The goal is meaningfully faster than typical waiting.

We’re exploring where to start based on parent demand and pediatrician participation.

Privacy is central. If we build this, it will be designed with strong security and clear consent.

Just honest feedback. Even “I wouldn’t use this” helps us build responsibly.