90 seconds to decide,a model that detects
Intelligent
triage.
A nurse types what she sees, enters vitals, and RORY combines both to decide: safe to go home, needs the ER, or call 911. In under 2 seconds.
Reads Text + Vitals Together
The nurse types what she sees. RORY reads that text with a medical AI (Bio_ClinicalBERT) and combines it with vital sign numbers. Two signals, one decision - because fever + 'leg pain, looks pale' means more than either alone.
Works with Missing Vitals
Only have a thermometer and pulse? RORY still works. It adapts and tells you how confident it is.
Catches What It Has Never Seen
If a patient does not match any known pattern, RORY flags it. Better to over-alert than to miss something new.
Watches for Deterioration
Tracks 5 readings over time. Even if each vital looks okay alone, RORY catches the overall trend toward danger.
Enter.Analyze.Decide.
Sepsis kills
when missed.
Every year, pediatric sepsis is missed because early symptoms look like the flu. By the time it is obvious, it is often too late. Rory Staunton was 12.
Gym class scrape
Rory Staunton, 12, cuts his arm diving for a ball. Looks like nothing.
Sent home from ER
Fever, vomiting, leg pain. ER runs labs but sends him home. Sepsis is already spreading.
Gone
Rory dies of septic shock. His lab results - flagged abnormal - were never reviewed.
RORY exists so that the next time a child walks into a school nurse's office or an ER with vague symptoms, the system catches what the eye might miss.
Model
performance.
Powered by
Palantir.
Built on Palantir Foundry and AIP. Ontology, Document Intelligence, and AI Logic working together to turn raw predictions into auditable clinical decisions.
Three cases, three outcomes.
9-year-old girl. Fever 101, runny nose, mom says 'just a cold.' RORY confirms: viral mimic. Send home with confidence.
Viral Mimic
School Nurse Setting
Three settings.
One mission.
RORY adapts to wherever the nurse is. School office with a thermometer, pediatric ED with full monitoring, or emergency department with sepsis protocol.
School Nurse
Limited vitals, maximum sensitivity
available at intake
- Temperature and heart rate only
- Highest sensitivity threshold
- HOME or ED recommendation
- Confidence penalty for missing vitals
- Mean imputation for absent fields
Pediatric ED
Full vital suite, standard protocol
available at intake
- HR, RR, Temp, SpO2, Cap Refill
- Standard SIRS thresholds
- HOME, ED, or 911 recommendation
- Full DBSCAN outlier detection
- Cluster drift monitoring
- Rory's Regulations citations
- Complete reasoning chain
Emergency Dept
All vitals plus sepsis protocol
available at intake
- All vitals with lab integration
- Lowest sepsis threshold
- 911 escalation priority
- Full audit trail
- Protocol citation system
- Pediatric SSC compliance
- Real-time drift alerts
- Outlier flagging
Every child deserves
a second look.
RORY gives nurses the confidence to catch what the eye might miss. 90 seconds. One tablet. HOME, ED, or 911.
Named after Rory Staunton (1999-2012)
Rory Staunton was 12 years old when he scraped his arm during gym class. He went to the ER twice. Both times he was sent home. He died of septic shock 3 days later.
For Rory.
1999 - 2012