Elder Care · Jaipur

The distance is measured in the hours you spend not knowing.

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.

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You call on Sunday and your mother says everything is fine. She always says everything is fine.

You ask the right questions. You ask twice. You ask in the way you've learned to ask, the way that sometimes gets a real answer. And you put the phone down knowing you still don't quite know.

There is the throat infection that hasn't cleared. The cousin who promised to take your father to the hospital and then got busy. The medication that you're fairly sure is being taken, most days. The neighbour who mentioned, in passing, that your mother had a fall last month, the one nobody told you about.

None of it is an emergency. That's almost the hardest part.

It is the slow accumulation of small things you can't see, can't verify, can't fix from where you are. It is the quiet weight of being the child who left for a better future, and who carries, somewhere underneath everything, the cost of having gone.

If something happens, who will actually be there?

One person. Named. Consistent. Present.

Not a call centre
Your parents know the person who visits. Your person knows their name, their habits, their adrak wali chai. Not a different face every week.
In the room with the doctor
Not sitting in the waiting room. In the consultation, taking notes, asking the questions you would ask if you were there.
The Monday update
Every Monday morning IST, a photograph, a health summary, and an honest note. Without you having to ask. This arrives whether the week was eventful or quiet.
Called, not messaged
In an emergency, you are called directly, not messaged. There is no hour at which we will not call you.
One person who knows your father's blood pressure and your mother's adrak wali chai.
That is the whole idea. Not an app. Not a platform. Not a rotating face every visit. One person, there when you cannot be.

Here is what happens every week.

Four days. Four different kinds of presence. One consistent rhythm.

Monday

The weekly update arrives

A WhatsApp message on your phone, wherever you are in the world. A photograph of your mother, taken at the last visit, sitting in her usual chair. Her blood pressure reading. A note about the new medication the doctor adjusted last week. One small observation: she has been sleeping better since the fan was moved. Nothing dramatic. Everything you needed to know.

Tuesday

The home visit

Forty-five minutes, sometimes an hour. Blood pressure, weight, a look at the medication box, a check that the bathroom mat hasn't slipped, a conversation about how the week has been. A photograph, with permission, for the next Monday update.

Thursday

At Narayana Hospital

Your father's cardiologist appointment. Pehradar is there. Not sitting in the waiting room, but sitting in the consultation, taking notes, asking the questions you would ask if you were there. By the time you wake up in the UK, the summary is on your phone.

Friday, 11pm

The phone is answered

Your mother calls Pehradar because she is not sure about a new symptom. The situation is assessed. If it is nothing, she is reassured. If it is something, you are called, not messaged, called, before any decision is made.

Not aspirations. Promises.

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.

01
Routine messages
WhatsApp and phone calls answered within four hours, between 7am and 9pm IST.
Within 4 hours
02
Urgent matters
A change in health, a medication concern, a decision that cannot wait, answered within one hour, at any time of day.
Within 1 hour
03
Emergencies
You are called directly, not messaged, without waiting for you to reach out. There is no hour at which we will not call you.
Always a call, never a message
04
The Monday update
Every Monday morning IST. Without you having to ask. A photograph, a health summary, an honest note. Whether the week was eventful or quiet.
Every Monday, without fail
Glasgow Scotland, UK Jaipur Rajasthan, India 5.5 hour time difference
Glasgow to Jaipur

A close friend of mine called me one evening from Manchester. His father had had a cardiac episode in Jaipur that morning. He was stable, they kept saying stable, but my friend was sitting in a flat in Manchester with a flight that would take the best part of a day, and no idea who was actually with his father at that moment.

He told me afterwards that the worst hours of his life were not spent at his father's bedside. They were spent in that Manchester flat, completely helpless, not knowing.

I listened, and I recognised something underneath his story. Because earlier this year, my own mother had developed a throat infection that would not clear. I was in Glasgow. She was in Jaipur. And for six weeks I learned what it actually means to worry about someone from a distance.

The result came back. It was not cancer. The relief was physical. But alongside the relief was something else: a clear-eyed understanding of what those six weeks had cost. And the knowledge that I had done this reasonably well, and it had still been this hard.

I built Pehradar because I knew the answer to that question, and I could not unknow it.

Ajay
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If your parents are in Jaipur, send me a message.

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.