Ogenta wasn't born in a boardroom. It was built out of a gap we lived through ourselves.
Starting, changing, or coming off a psychiatric medication is one of the most disorienting experiences a person can go through. The transition is a fog — side effects you didn't expect, moods that don't make sense, and a quiet fear that you can't tell anyone about because you're not sure how to explain it yourself.
When we went through it, we looked for something to help us track what was happening. Something that could hold the experience — the rough mornings, the small wins, the questions piling up before an appointment. We couldn't find it. What existed was either too clinical, too generic, or built for someone else entirely.
So we built Ogenta. Not as a product first, but as the thing we wished we'd had.
The hardest part wasn't the medication. It was feeling like no one understood what going through it actually felt like.
Most people who stop their medication don't do it because it didn't work. They do it because the adjustment was too hard to get through without support. Side effects felt overwhelming. They couldn't tell if things were getting better or worse. They didn't have a way to communicate what was happening to their doctor.
That's the window Ogenta is built for. The hardest stretch — whether you're starting, changing, or coming off.
Your tracker data stays on your device. Information leaves only when you choose to submit a form or use AI Support.
Ogenta works alongside your doctor, not instead of one. We help you show up to appointments better prepared.
Ogenta is free to use. We're building toward an insurance partnership model — not charging the people who need it most.
The psychiatric medication journey has been underserved by technology for too long. We're here to change that.
Ogenta is just getting started. We're building toward a world where any psychiatric medication change — starting, switching, or coming off — comes with a support system, not just a prescription and a follow-up appointment in six weeks.
That means better tools for tracking, better ways to communicate with your care team, and eventually a network that connects you to therapists and psychiatrists who understand what you're going through. We want insurance companies to cover this — because the data shows that supported medication adherence reduces costs, hospitalizations, and suffering.
We're building this carefully, because the people using it deserve care. If you have feedback, ideas, or just want to tell us what you wish Ogenta did better — we genuinely want to hear from you.
Ogenta is free, private, and built for exactly where you are right now.
Open the App →