Most clinic software is a database with screens bolted on. Mira is an intelligence that runs the practice — and four ideas beneath it that no competitor can copy without starting over.
Features can be copied in a quarter. These four design decisions sit beneath the database itself — and a rival cannot adopt one without rebuilding from the ground up.
The record belongs to the patient, as a tenant of their own data. The practice is granted access — never the other way round. It travels with them between clinics, and it is theirs to export or revoke.
A clinician holds one free, verified Mira account and carries it from clinic to clinic — like a professional profile that the practice connects to, rather than a login the practice owns.
The same intelligent core, reshaped per specialty. The surface speaks cardiology, or dental, or maternity; the intelligence underneath stays one thing.
Mira reads the whole practice in real time and does the next thing — drafts the letter, chases the lab, books the theatre — proposing, while you approve.
The intelligence is the substrate beneath every record, screen and action — always reading, always watching, present on every view. There is no separate place you go to "use the AI"; she is the ground the whole practice stands on, so the right thing is already in motion before you reach for it.

Each is a complete product in its own right — the practice, the front door, the growth engine. Take one, take all three; together they compound. The more Mira runs, the more she sees.
The clinical engine. Records, diary, theatre and billing on one intelligent system that prepares the work before you reach it.
Explore →Your front door. A website wired to the live diary that books patients while you sleep and attributes every visitor end to end.
Explore →The growth engine. Finds the patients already searching, publishes in your voice, and draws past patients back — continuously, attributed precisely.
Explore →One sign-in. One source of truth. One intelligence reading all of it.
The record holds the most private thing a person owns. So the architecture treats it that way: it stays inside, it stays yours, and every touch is traceable. Mira is engineered to meet the clinical-safety and information-security standards the NHS expects — DCB0129 and ISO 27001 among them — designed in from the foundation, not bolted on at the end.

Four primitives, one foundation, three modules — and a single intelligence reading the whole of it.