For patients and their carers who are adapting to life with IPF

What should we
do today?

WithIPF helps patients and carers turn daily symptoms into practical plans - shower seated or standing, cancel plans or push through, what to eat, how to pace the day.

Clinical tools help doctors monitor IPF and improve clinical care. WithIPF helps those who live with IPF to make the most of their daily lives.

2 min
Daily check-in
Shared
For patients & carers

Built around the day, not the diagnosis

Everything in WithIPF is designed to answer one question: what should we do today?

Diary

Daily check-in

A short log of breathlessness, energy, mood, appetite and activity. The trends over time help to see the patterns and identify what might help in the moment.

In this together

Shared visibility

Patient and carers see what helps. Support teams are made up of different groups, from immediate family, to wider circles of friends and service providers. Coordinate the day together from the shared updates so that supporters can see how and when they might be able to help.

Plans

Today's practical plan

Based on how you're feeling, get grounded suggestions: shower seated today, skip the errand, try a light walk after lunch. Real decisions, not generic advice.

Wellbeing

Emotional layer

How do we get through today? Support for the psychological weight of IPF, for the person living with it and the people who love and support them, for today and for what comes next.

Research

Clinical data translated

Connect readings from clinical monitoring apps. We help you understand what the numbers mean for today and help inform your next clinical appointment.

Supplies

IPF supplies

The things that might improve quality of life for IPF patients can vary and some of them are hard to find or frustrating to use. We curate them and find affordable ways to access them to connect people to the products and services that might help.

How it works

A few minutes each morning. A clearer day ahead.

Patients and carers can access the common diary to share breathlessness, energy, appetite, mood, oxygen use, dizziness and and activities.

WithIPF uses those signals to suggest a practical plan for the day, grounded in the key indicators of wellbeing and translated into practical decisions that a patient and their carers can actually make.

Over time, the patterns become visible. Good days and hard days. What helps. What doesn't. Something you can take back to your care and clinical teams.

Thursday, today

Morning check-in

In progress
Breathlessness
Energy
Mood
Appetite
Using oxygen today
Feeling dizzy or unsteady
Cough worse than usual

Today's suggestion

Energy is low today. Consider a seated shower and keep plans light this morning. Banana sandwiches for lunch.

Face the hard days and look ahead to the good ones together

Patients, carers, and clinicians who use withIPF find that adapting to the conditions of the moment can help to work with the challenges of the condition

The sharing settings helped us to let people know when visitors might be welcome or not.

Cassandra
Carer, husband diagnosed with IPF

Learning to operate the oxygen tank was frustrating, the cord is limiting and the power banks were unreliable. Once we found a reliable device, we had more confidence to go out.

David
Living with IPF

This doesn't pretend to be a clinical tool. It helps patients and carers live with the day-to-day and to share the insights with the clinical team.

Michael
Home care support

Clinical tools monitor

Manage the day with IPF

Patients and carers who live with IPF can coordinate around the challenges, get support and suggestions for optimising their daily lives.

This is not medical advice and does not replace the advice of your healthcare provider. Always work with your care team.