Your health, beside your wealth, on one page
28 May 2026 · 3 min read

Wealth Architect started as a tool for one specific job: see the structure of your money on one page. Entities, properties, accounts, loans, super, the relationships between them. That is still the centre of what it does. But spend enough time mapping the people at the heart of a family and a question starts to surface that has nothing to do with dollars. Who is this person's GP. What are they allergic to. What medications are they on, what dose, who prescribed them. Where is the Medicare card. Who do you call if something goes wrong.
These are the questions you only ever go looking for in the worst moment. A parent ends up in hospital and the family is scrambling for a list of medications. A child's GP locum has never met them and asks about allergies you can't quite remember off the top of your head. A friend who'd been listed as your emergency contact moved interstate two years ago and the number on file is dead. Each of these has a single fix, written down ahead of time, on one page, in a place you and your family can find.
The Health section sits on each individual's tile, just below the financial fields, collapsed by default so it doesn't crowd the wealth view. Open it and you have somewhere to keep blood type, organ-donor status, your GP's name and clinic, the specialists you see, the medications and dosing you're on, allergies, chronic conditions, and an emergency contact (preferably a person already on the canvas, so the name resolves automatically if it ever changes). If you have a Medicare card or a private-health policy on the canvas as their own tiles, they show up here too, linked back to the person they cover.
From it, you can generate a one-page Health Summary report. Blood type and organ-donor status as prominent badges at the top so a clinician reads them at a glance, then the GP block, medications and specialists in tidy tables, allergies and conditions as plain lists, the linked Medicare and private-health cards underneath. Print it for the kitchen drawer, save it as PDF and email it to a sibling, or carry a copy in the glove box. The point isn't to replace a clinical record. It is to make sure nobody is searching for basic facts at the moment those facts matter most.
None of this is medical advice and none of it is interpretation. Wealth Architect doesn't tell you whether a dosage is right, whether two medications interact, or whether your insurance is adequate. It writes down what you tell it and gives it back to you on demand. The decisions and the clinical judgement stay where they belong: with you, your family, and the professionals you trust.
You can fill in the Health section in five minutes for each person you care about. During the beta it is free, and it sits on the same canvas as the rest of what you're already keeping track of. The next time someone asks the question you didn't expect, the answer is one print away.