Pehradar is one trusted person in Jaipur who visits your parents every week, sits with them at every hospital appointment, and tells you the truth about how they are.
Most services send whoever is free that day. Pehradar is built on the opposite idea: one trusted person, who actually knows your parents.
Four days. Four different kinds of presence. One consistent rhythm.
A WhatsApp message on your phone. A photograph, a blood pressure reading, a note about last week's medication adjustment. Nothing dramatic. Everything you needed to know.
Forty-five minutes at their door. Health check, medication review, a proper conversation. A photograph for the Monday update.
Your father's cardiologist appointment. Pehradar is in the consultation room — not the waiting room — taking notes, asking your questions. The summary is on your phone by evening.
Your mother calls about a new symptom. Assessed, reassured if it is nothing. If it is something, you are called — not messaged — before any decision is made.
Every Monday morning, wherever you are in the world, this arrives on your phone. No chasing. No asking. No wondering.
An illustration of a typical update. Real updates include your parent's photograph, taken with their permission.

These are written into every service agreement we sign. We put them here because you should be able to read them before you ever speak to us.
A friend sat in a Manchester flat, not knowing who was with his father after a cardiac episode in Jaipur. Six months later I was in Glasgow, coordinating my mother's care through a phone screen for six weeks.
I built Pehradar because I knew what was missing, and I could not unknow it.
WhatsApp, email, or a short form. Tell us a little about your parents. We will talk first. There is no obligation.
Most conversations begin with a few messages, become a phone call, and go from there at your pace.