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inou for Claude

inou gives Claude direct access to your health data for independent medical analysis. Imaging, labs, genomics, and 27 data categories — all queryable through a single MCP integration.

What it does

inou connects Claude to your personal health records stored on the inou platform. Claude can browse your medical imaging (MRI, CT, X-ray), review lab results with trends over time, analyze genomic variants, and read clinical documents — forming its own independent medical opinions from the raw data rather than echoing prior assessments.

Key capabilities:

Setup

1. Sign in

When you connect inou to Claude, you'll be redirected to inou.com to sign in. Enter your email and verify with the code sent to your inbox. No password needed.

2. Authorize

Review the access request and click Allow to grant Claude read-only access to your health data.

3. Start asking

Claude will automatically discover your dossiers and available data. Ask about your labs, imaging, genome, or any health topic.

New users: A demo dossier (Jane Doe) with sample labs, imaging, and genome data is automatically available so you can explore the integration immediately.

Available tools

ToolDescription
list_dossiersList all patient dossiers accessible to your account
list_categoriesSee what data categories exist for a dossier with entry counts
list_entriesQuery entries by category, type, LOINC code, gene, date range, or parent hierarchy
fetch_imageFetch a DICOM slice as PNG with adjustable window/level
fetch_contact_sheetThumbnail grid for navigating imaging series
fetch_documentRetrieve document content with extracted text and metadata
get_versionServer version information

All tools are read-only. Claude cannot modify your health data.

Examples

"Review Jane Doe's CBC trend over the past year. Are there any concerning patterns?"

Claude queries lab entries by LOINC codes for WBC, RBC, hemoglobin, platelets, and differential. It compares values across four blood draws and identifies the December anomaly: elevated WBC (13.2), low hemoglobin (10.8), microcytic indices (MCV 72.4), and reactive thrombocytosis (452K) — suggesting iron deficiency with possible infection.

"Look at Jane's brain MRI. Walk me through what you see."

Claude lists imaging studies, navigates to the brain MRI series, fetches a contact sheet for orientation, then retrieves individual slices at diagnostic resolution. It describes anatomy, signal characteristics, and any visible findings — forming its own read independent of any radiologist report.

"What genetic variants does Jane carry that could affect medication metabolism?"

Claude queries genome entries filtered by pharmacogenomic genes (CYP2D6, CYP2C19, CYP3A4, etc.), reviews variant classifications and zygosity, and maps findings to drug metabolism implications — identifying poor/rapid metabolizer status for specific medication classes.

Security & privacy

Read our full Privacy Policy. For questions, contact support@inou.com.

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