Introducing Rosie
Rosie calls your parents every morning, listens, and tells you if something seems off.
A voice companion for seniors who live alone — so you can stop wondering and start knowing.
Your parent has someone. So do you.
A moment with Rosie
This is what your parent would hear.
Rosie: "Good morning Carson. How did you sleep?"
Carson: "Oh, pretty good Rosie. A little tired."
Rosie: "I thought you might be. You mentioned yesterday you didn't sleep well. Anything on your mind?"
Carson: "Nothing specific, really."
Rosie: "That's alright. It's raining today anyway — a good morning for tea and your puzzle. I'll check back this afternoon."
Tuesday morning, 7:14 AM
What Rosie does
Daily voice check-ins
Rosie calls morning, afternoon, and evening — not to ask a checklist of questions, but to have a real conversation. She remembers what your parent said yesterday and asks about it today.
Emotional support, every day
Rosie listens, responds warmly, and adapts to how your parent is feeling. Over time she learns their stories, their preferences, and their rhythms — building the kind of familiarity that makes seniors feel genuinely less alone.
Family alerts when it matters
If your parent misses a check-in and cannot be reached, Rosie texts the contacts you designated. You are never the last to know.
A brief daily brain activity
Each afternoon Rosie does a two-to-three minute conversational activity with your parent — a word game or a memory prompt — designed to keep the mind engaged and track changes over time.
How it works
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1
Set up in minutes
You answer a few questions about your parent — their name, their schedule, and who to call in an emergency. Takes about three minutes.
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2
Rosie calls, every day
Rosie checks in three times a day at times you choose. She chats, listens, and remembers what your parent shares.
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3
You get peace of mind
If your parent misses a check-in and does not pick up, Rosie sends you a text. No news is good news — and good news arrives the moment something changes.
Get early access
We'll reach out when Rosie is ready for your family.
Who Rosie is for
Rosie is for older adults who live alone or spend long stretches of the day without company — and for the family members who worry about them.
Rosie is not a medical device and is not a replacement for a doctor or therapist. She is a companion — one who shows up every day, remembers your parent's stories, and makes sure someone always knows they are okay.
Privacy & your data
Rosie stores basic profile information — your parent's name, check-in schedule, and medication reminders — along with notes from each conversation to help Rosie remember context over time.
Conversation data is encrypted, stored securely, and never sold to third parties or shared with advertisers. Only you and the contacts you designate can receive alerts. We do not share your parent's information with insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies, or any outside organization.
For questions about your data, contact us at Rosemary@rosemaryai.health.
Why I built Rosie
Hi, I'm Jane Guh, PhD. I built Rosie because I spent years working in healthcare and kept seeing the same gap — seniors who were medically fine but quietly disappearing into isolation, and families who had no way to know until something went wrong. The tools that existed were either clinical and cold or passive and reactive. I wanted something that actually showed up — that called your parent every morning, remembered their stories, and noticed when something was off. Rosie is what I wished existed.
Jane Guh, PhD
Founder & CEO, Rosemary AI
Previously: a researcher at the CDC and the University of Colorado, with 15 years across healthcare including Optum and Blue Cross Blue Shield.