The surgery ends. The looking-after doesn't.
Ask donors about the hardest part and many name the part nobody warned them about: after surgery, the calls stop. Renara is built so that never happens - the monitoring, the follow-up schedule, and the relationship with your care team continue for as long as you have one kidney. Which is to say: for life.
“Once they got my kidney they forgot about me.”
A follow-up schedule that doesn't slip
Living donors are due for follow-up at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years - blood pressure, kidney function, urine check - and yearly check-ups for life. Renara computes your dates from your surgery day, shows what's next, and nudges you before each one, so follow-up happens because the system remembers, not because someone happened to call.
Your labs, watched after surgery too
Tracking doesn't stop when the chart closes. Log your home blood pressure and lab results and Renara plots them against expected ranges. If something drifts - say creatinine creeping up between visits - it's flagged to your transplant team for a human decision. The point isn't software judgment; it's that no drift goes unseen.
Your care team stays in the loop
At participating centers, your coordinator sees the same post-donation panel: who's due for follow-up, whose numbers moved, who logged a concern. The clinic doesn't lose sight of you at discharge - the hand-off to long-term care is visible and owned, not assumed.
A recovery record that's yours
A private journal for pain, energy, activity, and anything you want documented. It stays on your device - no account, no server, no AI - and exports to a file you can hand your team, or keep as your own record of how recovery actually went.
Kidney-safe living, for the long run
The habits that protect your remaining kidney for decades: yearly labs, going easy on NSAIDs, telling every provider you have one kidney, hydration and blood pressure. Cited guidance, framed as risk reduction - not restriction.
And when you're ready - the loop closes
The person who helps the next donor most is someone who's been there. Donors who want to give back are connected to peer mentorship through their center and the NKF program. Your experience becomes the support someone else was missing.
See it as a donor would: the demo account Elena donated five weeks ago - her home screen is the post-donation experience, end to end.
None of this replaces your transplant center - it makes sure the thread between you and them never drops. Renara is free for donors, works without AI, and your journal never leaves your device.