Clara's AI watches your rescue-inhaler use and allergy triggers, then builds a plan that updates as your asthma shifts.
Get started How it worksDescribe symptoms, rescue-inhaler use in the last month, nighttime coughing, exercise limits, and triggers. Clara auto-pulls your refill history, prior spirometry, allergy diagnoses, and current controller regimen from 150,000+ connected records.
Clara grades your control (well-controlled, partly, uncontrolled) against GINA criteria1, then recommends step-up, step-down, or switch-track adjustments. It cross-checks pregnancy, age, beta-blocker use, and cardiac history before any long-acting beta agonist.
A licensed physician reviews the plan and signs prescriptions. If your asthma is severe, frequently exacerbating, or not responding to high-dose ICS–LABA, Clara refers you to pulmonology and keeps the plan coordinated.
Peak flow, rescue use, and your chart. Step-up decisions based on all three.
Get started Free to connect your records and start the conversation.Low-dose inhaled corticosteroid plus fast-onset LABA, used as both maintenance and reliever (MART / AIR). GINA's preferred track 1 for adults and adolescents with mild-to-moderate asthma1. Replaces "just an albuterol inhaler" for most patients with symptoms more than twice a month.
Fluticasone propionate or budesonide alone for track-2 regimens or patients whose pattern favors a fixed daily controller plus separate albuterol reliever. Clara picks between track 1 and track 2 based on adherence patterns and prior response.
Short-acting bronchodilator for symptom relief in patients on a track-2 ICS regimen, or as backup. GINA and the FDA label both warn against SABA monotherapy for persistent asthma — if you're refilling albuterol more than once every 2–3 months, your controller plan needs attention2. See the albuterol page for detail.
For patients on medium-dose ICS who remain uncontrolled, a twice-daily ICS–LABA combo is an evidence-based step-up. Clara checks your chart for prior trials and adjusts before adding a second controller.
10 mg daily. Useful when asthma overlaps with allergic rhinitis, exercise-induced bronchoconstriction, or aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease. Carries an FDA boxed warning for neuropsychiatric effects4; Clara discusses this before any prescription.
Severe exacerbation (can't speak in full sentences, RR >30, O₂ sat <92%, peak flow <50% of personal best), suspected pneumonia, a step-4/step-5 regimen not controlling symptoms, or biologic-eligible severe asthma all warrant in-person care or pulmonology. Clara coordinates the referral rather than prescribing through it.
| Clara | Teladoc | CVS MinuteClinic Virtual | GoodRx coupon only | Your doctor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AI response time | ✓ Instant, 24/7 | Scheduled video | Clinic hours | Coupon — no provider | Days–weeks |
| Reads your refill history & rescue use | ✓ | Intake only | Portions of records | ✗ | If your PCP |
| GINA-aligned step-up / step-down logic | ✓ AI-applied | Provider-dependent | Provider-dependent | ✗ | Provider-dependent |
| Coordinates asthma ↔ allergy plans | ✓ One AI, one plan | Different visit | Different visit | ✗ | If your PCP |
| Cost of care | Free to start; $25/mo membership for Rx & labs | Variable, often via employer | $107–$164 out of pocket per visit | No visit — Rx only | $150+ copay |
| Prescription may be covered by your insurance | ✓ Sent to your pharmacy | ✓ | ✓ | Cash coupon only | ✓ |
| Spots a worsening pattern before the next ED visit | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | Maybe at annual visit |
GINA step-up, step-down, or switch-track. Run on your actual data, every time.
Get started Coordinates with your allergy plan so the two aren't treated in isolation.Your last three albuterol refills are a claim about how controlled your asthma is. GINA has been explicit since 2019 that SABA-only asthma is not the right answer. The gap isn't the guideline — it's that nobody is reading your whole chart every time.
Clara notices that you've refilled albuterol three times since January and your last ICS refill was 9 months ago. Your old doctor may see that once a year at a 15-minute visit; Clara sees it every message.
Is ICS–formoterol MART the right move, or are you an adherence-to-a-daily-controller patient better served by track 2? Clara reasons through your adherence pattern, trigger profile, and prior response, then hands off to our doctor.
Five albuterol refills in a quarter plus a pollen spike plus a respiratory virus is a predictable setup for an exacerbation. Clara flags the pattern early and steps therapy up rather than waiting for the urgent care visit.
See the trend coming. Step therapy up before the next ED visit.
Get started HIPAA compliant. Records never sold or used to train public models.Connect your records for free. See what an asthma visit looks like when the AI already knows how many rescue refills you've had this quarter and when your allergy season starts.
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