What does the Phoenix APOE4 mobile app do?
The Phoenix app is a health hub built specifically for APOE4 carriers running prevention protocols. It combines 30-second daily check-ins where you rate how you feel and tag what you did, unified wearable integration through Apple Health and Google Health Connect (Oura, Whoop, Garmin, Apple Watch, and more feed automatically), bloodwork tracking with APOE4-optimized reference ranges rather than general-population ranges, supplement library and tracking, and community experiments with pod matching. The value is not any single feature but the integration, your wearable data plus bloodwork plus habits plus community data all viewed through an APOE4 lens rather than generic wellness.
How do daily check-ins surface patterns APOE4 carriers would miss otherwise?
Individual data points are noise. Longitudinal data with tags is signal. A daily 30-second check-in where you rate sleep, cognitive clarity, mood, and energy, and tag what you did (supplements, food timing, alcohol, exercise) produces enough data over weeks to reveal personal correlations. Example patterns from Phoenix member data include 'when you eat late, your HRV drops by 20 percent,' 'when you take magnesium glycinate before bed, your sleep score improves by 15 percent,' and 'no alcohol plus early bedtime plus cold plunge equals your best mental clarity days.' These are personal insights from your own data, not generic wellness tips, and they are the difference between guessing and knowing what works for your biology.
Does Phoenix track wearables like Oura, Whoop, Garmin, and Apple Watch?
Yes. The Phoenix app integrates with Apple Health and Google Health Connect, which means any wearable that syncs to either platform (Oura, Whoop, Garmin, Apple Watch, Fitbit, and others) automatically feeds data into Phoenix. Sleep, HRV, recovery metrics, activity, and heart rate all aggregate without manual entry or spreadsheet maintenance. The app then layers this physiological data against your supplements, check-ins, and bloodwork so you can spot correlations across all your inputs. For APOE4 carriers already wearing trackers, Phoenix turns that scattered data into actionable patterns.
Why does the Phoenix app use APOE4-specific reference ranges?
Standard laboratory reference ranges are calculated from general populations and do not account for APOE4's distinct risk profile. An ApoB of 80 mg/dL is 'normal' by standard ranges but represents elevated neurodegeneration risk for an APOE4 carrier. Similarly, an hs-CRP of 2.5 mg/L is 'normal' but signals meaningful inflammation for carriers who should target below 1.0. The Phoenix app applies APOE4-optimized ranges across all biomarkers so carriers see their results in the context of what is actually protective for their genotype, not what passes as average for the general population.