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Health Agentby Bonis Systems

Health Agent · Plain language

Paste the part you don't understand. Get it in plain English.

Discharge summaries, lab reports, and denial letters are written for clinicians, not families. Paste any of it here and this page pulls out every medical and insurance term it recognizes and says what it means — in plain English and Spanish. It only defines terms in its verified glossary, so it never makes a definition up.

Runs in your browser Nothing leaves your device English & Spanish Never guesses a definition

Term decoder

Paste the text. See the plain-English version.

Type or paste anything. It is read here in your browser and never uploaded.

In one line

The decode runs in the page you already loaded — no upload, no account, no server call. And because it only returns definitions from a fixed, verified glossary, it cannot invent a medical meaning. See the proof →

How it works

A glossary, not a guess

A lot of AI tools will happily "explain" a medical term by generating a plausible-sounding definition — and sometimes that definition is wrong in a way a worried family can't catch. This page works the opposite way. It scans your text for terms that appear in a fixed, human-reviewed glossary and returns only those verified definitions. A word it doesn't know is left alone; it is never given a made-up meaning.

It defines vocabulary. It does not diagnose, does not tell you what to do, and does not say you have anything. "Malignant" is defined as "cancerous, can spread" — it is never applied to you. For what a term means in your specific situation, ask your care team.

Once it makes sense

When the words are clear, you can act on them

Understanding the document is the first step. If it's a denial, decode the denial reason and check whether your prior-authorization request has what it needs. If you need the underlying records, the records requester writes the HIPAA request for you.

Questions

Common questions

Does the text I paste get sent anywhere?

No. The decode is done by code already running in your browser. There is no server endpoint behind this page — what you paste never travels over the network and is not stored. Close the tab and it's gone.

Can it make up a wrong definition?

No. It can only return definitions that are in its fixed, human-reviewed glossary. If a term isn't in the glossary, it is skipped — never given an invented meaning. That is the whole point of building it this way.

Why only some terms and not every word?

The glossary covers common cardiology, lab, spine, eye, and insurance terms that families ask about most. It is deliberately bounded so every answer is one a clinician reviewed. If a term you need isn't covered, ask your care team — and the glossary grows over time.

Is this medical advice?

No. It defines words; it does not diagnose, advise, or tell you what to do. For what a term means for your specific situation, talk to your doctor or care team.