Offline-first architecture
Works in rural clinics with poor connectivity. Syncs automatically when a signal returns — no data lost, no workflows interrupted.
We build mobile and clinical software that closes the gap between the consulting room and daily life. Our seven integrated apps connect patients, clinicians, pharmacists, paramedics, public-health teams, and hospital administrators across the South African continuum of care.
Built to meet the standards that matter
Most digital health tools solve one slice of the problem. Ours work together — so a symptom logged at 2 a.m. on a patient's phone is visible to the clinician the next morning, and a prescription written on a tablet flows straight to the pharmacy queue.
Works in rural clinics with poor connectivity. Syncs automatically when a signal returns — no data lost, no workflows interrupted.
Consent management, audit trails, role-based access and encryption at rest and in transit. Compliance isn't a checkbox — it's the foundation.
FHIR-compatible data exports mean your patient's records follow them to any clinician, any facility, any medical aid partner.
Stylus-based clinical notes. One-tap symptom logs. 6-character data-sharing codes. Every interaction designed for the second it actually happens.
English, isiZulu, and Afrikaans on day one — three of South Africa's most-spoken official languages — with the remaining eight rolling out as professional translation completes.
Not a concept deck — a working platform. Deployable to a clinic, a ward, or a national programme without months of custom engineering.
From the paramedic in the ambulance, to the bedside tablet, to the patient's pocket, to the pharmacist looking up an interaction at 3 a.m., to the public-health officer watching for an outbreak at 6 — every surface designed to work alone, and better together.
A role-based clinical workflow tool for hospital staff — deployed on tablets in consulting rooms, wards, and admin offices.
A patient-facing smartphone companion for the 99% of the time people spend outside the consulting room.
Women's Health · Mobile
A private companion for every stage of women's reproductive health — from first period to menopause — plus a secure bridge to any clinician.
A pharmacotherapy reference covering the medicines South Africans actually use every day — from HIV and TB to chronic care, mental health, antibiotics, and emergency drugs — with a parallel patient mode for adherence support.
EMS · Pre-arrival · Dual mode
A pre-arrival alert system that connects ambulances on the road to the ER team waiting at the hospital — so the people who matter are at the door before the patient arrives.
Pharmacy network · Multi-tenant
A national pharmacy platform that turns every interaction across the network into structured, POPIA-compliant data — for chronic-medication brands, medical aids and the pharmacy chains that dispense for them.
Surveillance · Standalone
A standalone disease-surveillance product for the teams that need only this — provincial health departments, NICD, hospital groups, NGOs, and pharmacy chains. The same outbreak engine that ships inside our clinical platform, packaged on its own.
Hardware · Coming 2026
Coming soon
A self-service health-screening kiosk that takes the basics — blood pressure, weight, BMI, body composition, SpO₂, heart rate — without a clinician in the loop. Drop one in a clinic waiting room, a Clicks store, a workplace, or a community outreach point, and results are in the patient's record before they walk away.
Eleven official languages, eight provincial e-health stacks, load-shedding designed in from day one — not retrofitted from an American import.
Section 18 minimum-necessary access and Section 26 special-PI handling are baked into the data model — not added by a compliance consultant after launch.
A paramedic in a Mpumalanga ambulance and a clinician in a rural district hospital both keep working when the link drops. Sync resumes the moment it returns.
ICD-10-MIT, NMC notifiable diseases, SATS triage, HPCSA, SANC, NHLS — the regulator's vocabulary is built in, not bolted on.
Buy the EMS module for paramedics, the coding queue for the CCO, or the full continuum. Every piece works alone — and gets stronger together.
Polokwane to Cape Town, public to private, paramedic to ICU — the file follows the patient, not the other way around.
We started Dolme Innovations because we watched South African clinicians open 30-page paper files from the first page under time pressure, and watched chronic patients show up to appointments without being able to answer "how have the last six weeks been?"
Our apps aren't generic health software dropped into a new market. They're built for the reality of a country with uneven connectivity, eleven languages, a strict privacy regulator, and clinicians whose time is the scarcest resource in the room.
See how we'd deploy for youWe're not writing this from a boardroom. We started Dolme Innovations because of what we kept seeing inside South African clinics, hospital wards, and casualty rooms.
A doctor we know — working in a busy clinic — opened a patient's file to check the most recent set of bloods. The file was three years thick, held together by a single bulldog clip, and as she leafed through it pages drifted onto the floor. A discharge summary from 2024. A scan request. Half a referral letter. By the time she'd put the pages back in some kind of order, the patient's ten-minute slot was gone, and she still hadn't found the lab result she was looking for.
That clinic wasn't broken. The staff were trained and dedicated. The system was paper, and paper has limits.
A few months later we sat in a casualty department in another city while a relative of ours was admitted unconscious. The on-call doctor asked the questions every doctor asks — what is she on, does she have allergies, when was her last specialist visit, what is her cardiac history. We couldn't answer most of them. Her files were elsewhere. Her last ECG was in a hospital three provinces away. The team treating her made the best decisions they could, with almost nothing in front of them.
Once we started looking, we saw the same shape of problem everywhere. A patient managed for diabetes in Polokwane shows up at a clinic in Cape Town and gets a fresh chart — because the original is in a folder in a steel cabinet 1,500 km away, or because it was misplaced last year and a brand-new file was opened that knows nothing about the medications she's been on for half a decade. A pharmacist dispenses one prescription beside another script she can't see. A specialist starts a chronic medication without knowing what the GP already tried. Three files exist for the same person in three different towns, and none of them know about the other two.
In an emergency, that gap stops being an inconvenience. It becomes the difference between a safe decision and a guess — about an allergy, about a chronic medication, about a condition the team in front of the patient has no way of knowing.
That is why we built this. Not paperless for the sake of it, and not "AI in healthcare" for the marketing of it — just a single, secure record of a patient's care that travels with them, that a clinician can search in seconds, and that an emergency team can read in the moment they need it most. Built to the privacy standards South Africans deserve, in the languages people actually speak, and tested in the real conditions our clinicians work in every day.
We're building it because we'd want our own family's care to look like this.
The gap between what happens in the consulting room and what happens in the twelve weeks before the next appointment — that's where chronic care lives or dies. Dolme Innovations is the first platform we've seen actually built for that gap.
Whether you're a hospital group, a medical aid, an NGO running chronic-care programmes, or a clinician looking to equip a practice — we'll run a 30-minute walkthrough tailored to your context and show you the live apps on real devices.