When someone suddenly feels a symptom like a headache, stomach pain, or shortness of breath, three options usually come to mind:
Call 911, go straight to the emergency room, or start searching on Google or asking AI chatbots.

The problem is:
911 has to send an ambulance, even for cases that aren’t serious.
Emergency rooms fill up with non-urgent patients who end up waiting for hours.
And online searches usually show the worst-case scenarios, which only increases stress.

Now, let’s look at the numbers:
Every year, there are over 16 million in-person ER visits in Canada. About 17% of them are non-urgent — that’s nearly 2.7 million unnecessary visits. The result? Millions of hours wasted in waiting rooms, huge costs for the system, and frustration for patients.

This is where QuickTriage comes in.
We’ve built a virtual triage tool that works just like an ER nurse, but online, fast, and always available.

The user enters their symptom, answers a few key questions, and the system determines:
Should they go to the ER right away?
Do they need a walk-in clinic or family doctor?
Or is it something they can manage safely at home?

With QuickTriage, patients feel less anxiety, emergency resources are freed up, and those who truly need urgent care get help faster.
A simple change — with a big impact on the healthcare system.