Your questions, answered clearly.
Calm, jargon-free explanations for urinary and reproductive health — because understanding what's happening is the first step to feeling better.
I put off asking about it for three years. The assessment took four minutes and I had answers before I left the couch.
Robert, 54
Elevated PSA concern · Took the 4-minute check
No account required · Not a diagnosis · Educational summaries only
You're not the only one wondering.
Each story here started with a quiet question. The condition names felt foreign. The numbers felt alarming. Understanding changed that.
"My doctor said 'calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis' and I nodded like I understood. I didn't. The explanation here was the first time it actually made sense — and I knew exactly what to change."
Linda, 47
Kidney Stones
"I was planning trips around bathroom locations. I thought it was just aging. The section on overactive bladder made me realize this had a name, and more importantly, options."
Margaret, 61
Overactive Bladder
Myth: Kidney stones only happen to older men.
Reality: Women account for 40% of kidney stone cases, and rates in younger adults have doubled in 20 years.
"My number came back at 5.2 and the nurse said 'slightly elevated' and moved on. I spent two weeks convinced it was cancer. Reading the PSA explainer here — with the context about age ranges — brought me back to earth."
David, 58
Elevated PSA
Myth: Needing to urinate frequently is just part of getting older.
Reality: Urgency and frequency are symptoms, not inevitabilities. Most causes are treatable.
"We had a surgical consult scheduled and I still didn't understand what grade IV reflux meant for our daughter. This was the first explanation that didn't make me more scared — it made me prepared."
Sarah, 34
Pediatric Reflux
Four steps. No jargon.
The assessment was designed for someone who's been quietly worrying — not for someone who already knows the medical vocabulary.
Choose your concern
30 secondsFour plain-language categories — pain, frequency, flow, or a lab result you want explained. No medical terminology required.
Answer three to five questions
2 minutesSimple toggles. "A few days" or "several months." "Barely noticeable" or "quite disruptive." No scales from 1 to 10.
Leave your email
30 secondsThat's all we need. We'll send a personalized educational summary — what your symptoms might mean, and what questions are worth asking.
Read your summary
In your inboxPlain language. No diagnosis. No upsell. Just the kind of clear explanation you'd want a trusted doctor to give you.
No account. No diagnosis. Just clarity.
Browse at your own pace.
Not ready for the assessment? Start here. Each guide is written for someone who doesn't yet know what questions to ask.
Kidney Stones
CommonWhat they are, why they form, what "passing" actually means, and when to call a doctor.
Overactive Bladder
Very CommonThe difference between normal aging and a treatable condition — and what your options actually are.
PSA Results Explained
Men 50+What your number means in context, why age matters, and the questions your doctor expects you to ask.
Recurrent UTIs
WomenWhy some infections keep coming back, what triggers an evaluation, and what "recurrent" officially means.
Pediatric Kidney Reflux
PediatricGrading explained in plain language, what the grades actually mean for treatment, and why most resolve naturally.
Blood in Urine (Hematuria)
All AgesVisible and microscopic — what causes it, what needs urgent attention, and what usually doesn't.
Knowing is better than wondering.
You've been carrying this question for a while. The assessment takes four minutes and the summary arrives before you've finished your tea.
No account required · Educational content only · Not a diagnosis