Medical Archive

Every hospital letter, blood test, and consultant note — in one searchable, queryable place.

After a few years of cancer treatment, you end up with hundreds of documents. Hospital letters. Pathology reports. Blood test results. Radiology scans with descriptions. Notes from your oncologist, your GP, three different consultants. You've got them in email. In the NHS portal. On scraps of paper from appointments. And when your new team asks "what was your CEA in June?", you spend 45 minutes searching through everything.

What It Does

Searchable Medical Library

Upload your hospital letters, blood tests, consultant notes, scans. Search across all of them in seconds.

Blood Test Tracking

Pull out key metrics across time. See your CEA, your full blood count, your liver function. Watch the trends.

Quick Summary Generation

Ask the tool to summarise your medical history, your treatment timeline, or what happened in a specific period.

Long-Term Memory for Tracker

Use it alongside the Chemo Tracker or Medication Manager. Your archive connects to your tracking data.

Natural Language Queries

Ask it questions: "When was my last chemo?" "What was my HbA1c in January?" "What side effects did I have in cycle 3?" Get instant answers.

Built with NotebookLM, not Claude. Your Medical Archive is built on Google's NotebookLM, which is purpose-built for searching and summarising documents. Not a general AI. Not ChatGPT. A dedicated research tool for your own medical records.

Who It's For

Anyone with years of medical records scattered across multiple sources. Anyone who gets asked about their medical history and needs to search through hundreds of pages to find the answer. Anyone who wants to actually understand what's happened to them over years of treatment.

How to Build Your Own

This one uses Google's NotebookLM — a free tool that's purpose-built for searching and summarising documents.

What you need

NotebookLM (notebooklm.google.com) — free with a Google account. This is where your archive lives.

Your medical documents — hospital letters, blood test results, consultant notes, scan reports. PDFs work best.

A bit of time — uploading and organising takes a couple of hours initially, then a few minutes per new document.

The approach

Create a new NotebookLM notebook. Upload all your medical documents as sources — letters, blood tests, scan results, anything in writing.

Once uploaded, you can ask it questions in plain English: "When was my last scan?", "What was my CEA in January?", "Summarise my treatment history for my GP."

I wrote about the full setup in the blog post NotebookLM — it walks through the process step by step.

Your documents stay in your Google account. Nothing is shared. NotebookLM doesn't train on your data.

Other Tools

⚕️ FC:AI does not offer medical advice. This is a personal document management and search tool. Your medical team handles the medicine.