A named hub nurse
Each enrolled family is assigned one paid caregiver at their nearest hub — Nurse Adaeze (Warri), Nurse Mary (Effurun), Nurse Patience (Sapele), or Nurse Joseph (Omadino). One name. One WhatsApp. One relationship.
Family Bridge is the INC-USA program that stitches diaspora children to Nigerian parents — one caregiver, one hub, one monthly digest. Nurse Adaeze at Warri Central knows your father by name. You stop guessing. She tells you.
Each enrolled family is assigned one paid caregiver at their nearest hub — Nurse Adaeze (Warri), Nurse Mary (Effurun), Nurse Patience (Sapele), or Nurse Joseph (Omadino). One name. One WhatsApp. One relationship.
BP, pulse, SpO₂, glucose, weight — measured at the hub once a month and tracked for six-month trend lines. A diaspora MD reviews the trend before it ever reaches you.
Every Rx is verified against the active medication list. Omadino Pharmacy and the Warri Central pharmacy deliver refills to the hub — or to the elder’s door if they can’t travel.
First Sunday of every month — one email. Vitals, medications, visits, any flags. If there’s nothing urgent, you spend 90 seconds on it. If there’s a flag, your inbox shows it in wine-red.
Three rings away. A hub nurse on-call, a physician on the second-line, and a ride to Warri Central Hospital if it’s a true emergency. You will be on that call in under five minutes.
Our Iwere Care caregiver portal. You see what the nurse sees, with one tap. Chart updates. Rx. Next visit. WhatsApp thread. Your siblings can join the dashboard too — one family, one view.
You pick a tier, add your parent’s name and hub. We assign a caregiver within 24 hours.
Nurse Adaeze calls your parent and schedules a baseline visit — usually within 7 days.
Your parent goes to the hub. BP, glucose, weight. Diaspora MD reviews and writes the 90-day plan.
You get the first monthly digest. Trend lines kick in at month three.
If your parent has HTN or diabetes, they’re added to the Dr. Raphael monthly cohort review.
You stop worrying every day. You worry when the nurse says to worry. That’s the trade.
No. If your parent has a trusted local GP, we coordinate with them. Our hub nurse becomes the connective tissue — she shares our chart with your parent’s GP, and they share theirs with us. Nothing falls between desks.
Up to five diaspora family members can share the same dashboard. Useful for split-sibling households — one in the US, one in the UK, one in Lagos. Nurse Adaeze’s WhatsApp rotates answers across all of you.
Family Bridge runs on a sliding scale — from $60/month (single elder, one hub) up to $180/month (multi-generational household). Payment is USD or GBP, monthly via Stripe. No contract.
If they’re within 30 km of a hub, the nurse schedules a home visit once a quarter at no added cost. If they’re further out, we can fund a car to bring them to the hub — case-by-case, coordinated with the caregiver.
The escalation line is answered within five minutes, 24/7. Nurse triages. If it’s urgent, she dispatches the on-call driver and calls you in parallel. We have a standing arrangement with Warri Central Hospital for fast-track admission.
Pick a tier, add your parent’s name and hub. Nurse Adaeze calls them by the end of the next business day.