SHARKDREAMS
Adherence was the first product, not the company. Underneath it sat one HIPAA-aligned cloud platform — and the same platform plugs into a pharmacy, a hospital, a lab, a school, or a government program. The link changes; the server doesn't. This is the reach, across two countries.
The thesis is simple: build the platform once, then sell it — with a field-services arm and a data agreement — to one institution after another. A pharmacy was first. A hospital, a diagnostics lab, a school screening program, and a state government followed.
Every extension followed the same three-part structure. The clearest proof is the Global Hospitals engagement (Mar 2020), which was deliberately written as three parallel contracts — and that template is the model for every vertical:
The cloud server secures, manages, and transports the institution's data; HIPAA-aligned; dashboards for authorized access.
A field-services arm operates on the ground — connecting patients at home back to the institution.
A defined data agreement governs the anonymized records that flow through the platform.
In the U.S., the “services” and “platform” sit together inside LIVIT and the pharmacy workflow. In India, they were split across SharkDreams (platform) and Vera (services + data) — but it is the same shape.
The U.S. vertical is the cleanest to lead with: LIVIT connected the cloud server to specialty pharmacies (PerformRx, AcariaHealth), turning device adherence signals into a pharmacist-ready console — HIPAA-compliant, under Business Associate Agreements, and mapped to a real RTM reimbursement path.
Connected sensing device → cloud analytics → pharmacist dashboard, on real specialty-pharmacy patients (2017–2021). The model → The software → The economics →
The same platform extended across four more institution types in India, each backed by a real contract or government engagement. Data referenced below was handled on an anonymized, HIPAA-aligned basis as contracted at the time.
A major hospital group (Mar 2020). Structured as three contracts: SharkDreams provided the cloud/platform (secure, manage, transport anonymized data; dashboards; 24/7 support), Vera provided field services connecting home patients back to the hospital, and a data agreement governed the anonymized records.
Lab-to-lab routing and pricing, plus state-scale sample collection — the platform as the connective tissue between collection points and laboratories.
Under India's national child-health program (RBSK), government-school children were screened for the “four Ds” (defects at birth, deficiencies, diseases, developmental delays) — with health data captured, referral cards issued, and progress tracked under expert doctors.
State-scale COVID sample-collection programs with the governments of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana — the platform and field teams operating at public-health scale.
Because the platform was built once and reused, each vertical can be restarted on a service basis rather than rebuilt from zero. The U.S. pharmacy vertical is the most directly compliant to lead with today; the India verticals demonstrate the platform's range and are re-offerable as services where appropriate.
The platform never changed. Only the institution on the other end of the wire did — pharmacy, hospital, lab, school, government.