Salus Terms
Salus provides organizational and preparation support, not clinical care.
Salus is a personal software system intended to help organize health information, surface questions for follow-up, prepare summaries, and assemble appointment materials. It is not a medical provider, emergency service, or regulated clinical judgment engine.
Terms of use for the Salus local-first health chief-of-staff system.
Nature of the service
Salus is intended to help the user collect, normalize, summarize, and review health-related information from local records and authorized data sources. Its function is operational support, not diagnosis or treatment.
Any summaries, packets, charts, or alerts produced by Salus should be understood as organizational outputs that still require human review and, where appropriate, licensed medical input.
No diagnosis, treatment, or medication advice
Salus does not diagnose diseases or conditions, recommend treatment plans, change medications, or give dosing advice.
The user should not treat Salus outputs as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a licensed clinician.
No emergency use
Salus is not intended for emergency response or time-critical medical decision-making. If the user may be experiencing a medical emergency, the appropriate action is to contact emergency services or seek immediate licensed medical care.
Red-flag symptoms or unusual patterns should be treated as escalation prompts only. Salus may help identify that something needs review, but it is not the authority for what to do medically next.
User responsibility for records and review
The user remains responsible for reviewing source records, confirming material facts, and deciding what to share with clinicians, caregivers, or other third parties.
Imported records should remain truthful to their source. Salus is meant to preserve source imports and build derived summaries downstream rather than rewrite the original record as though it were a new authoritative source.
Third-party services and external data
Salus may rely on third-party services or exports, including Oura, only to the extent the user has authorized them. Continued availability of those services, APIs, or export formats is outside Salus's control.
If third-party access is revoked or an external provider changes its systems, parts of Salus may stop updating until the connection is reauthorized or the import path is adjusted.
Changes, suspension, and revocation
Salus may evolve over time as its local workflows, schemas, or summaries change, but those changes do not convert it into a medical service.
The user may stop using Salus at any time by discontinuing local operation, deleting local files, and revoking any third-party authorizations that were granted to it.