Every InstantHPI module, explained plainly: what it is, what it teaches, what it costs, and what happens to your data. The education is free forever. The paid services exist to fund the mission — and each one tells you exactly what you are buying before you pay a cent.
What it is: a Telegram helper that runs an educational medical simulation. It asks the same kind of symptom questions a nurse asks at check-in, sends your answers to two or more independent AIs that must cross-check each other, and returns plain-language possibilities, warning signs to watch, and next steps — plus a one-page summary you can bring to a real doctor.
What it teaches: what AI can and cannot do for your health. Every session opens with the un-skippable truth: this is AI-automated, it can make things up, and no person reviews it unless YOU take it to a doctor. It also teaches you never to share your name, ID, or phone number in a chat — they are never needed to answer a health question.
→ t.me/InstantHPIBot · costs nothing, no account with us, nothing stored
See a real session, start to finish. Below is one complete example — an educational simulation of a man, 38, with a spreading skin infection: the multilingual welcome, the structured symptom questions a nurse would ask, the ten cross-check questions, the plain-language education, the example documents (each stamped EDUCATIONAL EXAMPLE — a real doctor must issue their own), and the patient's own questions answered. Every screen is exactly what you would see. Click any image to open it full size.




















What it is: the same bot, but yours. The complete open-source kit — bot, multi-AI panel engine, waiting-room kiosk, health-history reader — free to download and run on your own computer. Every copy is a node: your family's or your village's own healthcare-education system that keeps working no matter what happens anywhere else.
What it teaches: how to operate AI safely — panel of 2+ models that must agree or say they disagree, de-identification before anything leaves your machine, a free run-it-entirely-locally option (Ollama), and disclaimers that cannot be switched off. You don't need to code: install a free AI assistant app, open the folder, say "set this up for me."
→ github.com/carlosfalai/free-universal-healthcare-ai · MIT license · bring your own AI keys
What it is: the safety curriculum behind everything here. What PHI (personal health information) is, why it must never enter a public record, how de-identification works, what the emergency red flags are, and why every node must show the disclaimers to every person, every time.
What it is: why this exists — the mission against dephased medicine and the regions living under 1 physician per 10,000 people — and the hash-chained public ledger where everything we publish is recorded, verifiable, and append-only.
→ the story · the ledger
What it is: a panel of 8 independent AI seats that debate your case in memory, entirely on AWS Bedrock under a signed HIPAA BAA, and email you a PDF opinion. Then everything is discarded — zero storage, and no human ever reviews it. That is the product: anonymity and security. These cases never enter the blockchain and are never seen by a physician.
The councils: CaseCheck (medical second-look) · DivorceCheck · DisabilityCheck · MarriageCheck · RelationshipCheck · NutritionCheck · Immortality · Alpha · Woman · Stacy · Random
What it teaches: what a multi-AI debate actually looks like — every council publishes a free sample opinion so you can read the format before paying.
What it is: the opposite privacy contract, on purpose. Node operators who opt in pay a listing/API fee; their de-identified cases flow to a private community of license-verified physicians who grade them thumbs-up / thumbs-down under verified nicknames — verified at the door, anonymous inside, records public. The public sees the display: node scores, physician nicknames and tallies, the count of verified physicians, and the hash chain. The validation is what a node is buying.
What it teaches: whether an AI health tool actually holds up when real physicians read its work — measured, published, and verifiable, instead of promised.
What it is: structured self-study modules (including post-apocalyptic / prepper healthcare). Each module unlocks free for the whole world at 1,000 buyers — buying one funds its own liberation.
What it is: the physician side of the mission. The Guild ($100/mo) funds physician verification — the door check that makes anonymous-but-verified grading possible. The tools: AI-drafted documentation the physician reviews and approves one case at a time, plus form-automation at instanthpi.ca/forms.
What it teaches: how a working physician actually uses AI under their own supervision — the work is AI, the verification is human and licensed.
What it is: one link, $1 to $10,000, pick the project you want to push (health bots, preppers, doctors, law, courses, all of it). Every supporter goes on the wall. This — plus the paid services above — is what keeps the free modules free.
EVERY module — free or paid, ours or anyone's node — must tell you the truth before it does anything: these are AI-automated services. They are not reviewed by people before delivery. They can be wrong. They are education, not a doctor. A node that hides this is removed from the network.