Protocol
Care plans that run like code, not like paper.
A Protocol is a versioned, executable plan that lives in your chart. Every rule is explicit, every change is logged, and every recommendation is linked to the evidence behind it. You can read the reasoning and your clinician can rewrite any piece of it.
What a protocol contains
Rules, triggers, evidence, history.
A printed care plan tells you what to do. It does not tell you when the plan should change, what it will trigger on, or what study supports it. A Regain Protocol does all three, in a form the AI and your clinician work from simultaneously.
Rules
Each clinical rule is written in plain language and compiled into an executable expression. You can read both: the English and the logic. If your clinician disagrees with how a rule fires, they edit the rule, not a free-text note.
Triggers
Protocols react to new data — a lab result, a medication change, a symptom in chat. The trigger is declared in the Protocol, so the behavior is predictable and auditable.
Evidence
Every recommendation attaches to a citation trail: the study, the guideline, the rule version. If the evidence changes, the Protocol gets a version bump and your clinician sees the diff.
History
The full revision history of your Protocol is visible to you. Every change is attributable — human or AI — and every change keeps the reason attached.
The principle
If the plan can't be read, it can't be trusted.
Clinical reasoning that hides inside a PDF is opaque. Clinical reasoning that lives in an executable document can be reviewed, challenged, and improved by every person in the loop — including you.