Allostatic
How it works

Care that starts with a conversation, not a clipboard.

Allostatic is a virtual physical therapy practice. The AI does the busywork — history, charting, triage — so a licensed clinician can spend their judgment where it counts.

Step 01

An AI takes a great history

Allostatic's intake agent asks about onset, what helps and hurts, severity, impact on your life, and your goals — a calm conversation, not a 40-field form. It connects to your records when you allow it.

Step 02

A guardian screens every message

In parallel, a second agent reads everything for red flags — cauda equina, fracture, DVT, cardiac and stroke patterns. Anything dangerous interrupts intake and routes you to the right level of care immediately.

Step 03

A doctor of physical therapy steps in

A licensed DPT reviews the AI's draft assessment, decides what's actually going on, and joins your conversation to confirm the plan and answer questions. If something is outside PT scope — imaging, medication, a specialist — they refer you to a physician, fast.

Step 04

You get a plan that stays current

Specific next steps and graded loading you can actually follow. Your care window stays open for a week; message back anytime as things change.

Why asynchronous

Most movement problems don't need a scheduled video call.

Messaging fits real life

Answer when you can, from anywhere. No PTO, no commute, no waiting room — care that meets a 6am back spasm at 6am.

Better notes, better decisions

Because the history is captured precisely and in writing, your clinician starts from a complete picture instead of a rushed five minutes.

An honest hand-off when you need one

If something is outside physical-therapy scope — imaging, medication, a specialist — your PT says so plainly and points you to the right place. We never push products or lock you into a subscription.

A real, licensed clinician

Every plan is owned by a doctor of physical therapy licensed in your state — 42 and counting.

Ready to try it?

Free to start. You only pay when a physical therapist takes your case.