RightLife Launches India’s First Wearable-Free AI Preventive Healthcare Platform
Designed as a digital health co-pilot, the platform combines sleep, nutrition, movement, and mental well-being into a single experience, aiming to help users transition from health awareness to sustained action.
RightLife, part of JetSynthesys, a Pune-based digital technology startup, has launched India’s first unified, AI-driven, wearable-free preventive healthcare platform that uses artificial intelligence to deliver personalised, actionable health insights without the need for wearable devices.
Designed as a digital health co-pilot, the platform combines sleep, nutrition, movement, and mental well-being into a single experience, aiming to help users transition from health awareness to sustained action.
The platform analyses daily lifestyle inputs to generate personalised guidance through weekly and quarterly health intelligence reports. These reports are designed to help users identify patterns, optimise habits and build sustainable routines over time, supporting physical fitness, cognitive sharpness and emotional wellbeing.
Moreover, RightLife uses proprietary facial scan technology, AI-powered food scanning and advanced data correlation models to generate insights directly from smartphone interactions.
“Preventive healthcare in India has struggled not because of lack of intent, but because solutions haven’t been built for everyday life,” said Nilanjan Mukherjee, Founder, RightLife. “RightLife has been designed to help people move from intention to action by making preventive healthcare accessible, holistic, and sustainable through the device they already use every day.”
Despite steady growth in India’s wearable market over the past decade, usage remains limited beyond urban and higher-income groups, highlighting the constraints of hardware-led health solutions. By removing the dependency on devices, RightLife seeks to make AI-driven preventive healthcare more accessible and scalable.
The company says its AI foundation has been trained and validated over several years using diverse datasets and real-world behavioural signals. Rather than focusing on diagnosis, the platform emphasises decision support and habit formation, reinforcing responsible and ethical use of AI in healthcare.
RightLife positions itself as a complement to clinical care, enabling users to make informed daily health choices. “By building a wearable-free, smartphone-first platform grounded in validated scientific studies and purposefully correlated through AI, we’ve created a system that delivers insights people can realistically act on and sustain over time,” said Adit Mukherjee, Co-Founder, RightLife.
Stay tuned for more such updates on Digital Health News