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Kindred Practice
Paige — Your AI Partner

You hold space for others. Paige holds it for you.

Not a tool. Not an automation. A presence — intelligent, careful, and always working in the background so that your attention can stay where it belongs: in the therapy room, with your clients.

Session with Sarah M. complete
ClientSarah M. — Session #14
FrameworkCBT — Cognitive Restructuring
Key themesBoundary-setting, self-compassion
ProgressClient identified 3 cognitive distortions
Follow-upRevisit thought record exercise

The tools were built to run a practice. Nobody built one for the therapist running it. Until now.

Therapists hold so much for other people. The emotion, the histories, the most difficult moments — held with care and safety, session after session. And then, on top of that, a practice to run. Notes to write, invoices to send, schedules to manage, documentation to maintain. None of it is why you chose this career, and all of it takes time and attention that could go elsewhere.

Kindred Practice was built around a simple belief: that the person doing this work deserves a platform that works as hard for them as they work for their clients. Paige is the expression of that belief. She is not a feature. She is not a chatbot or an automation engine. She is an AI partner, woven throughout the platform, whose entire purpose is to reduce what you carry so that you can bring more of yourself to the work that matters.

For the first time, the weight doesn't all fall on you.

What Paige does

Paige shows up across every part of Kindred Practice — not as a separate AI layer you have to remember to use, but as a quiet presence embedded in the platform's everyday flow. Here is what she carries.

The administrative layer

Session notes drafted in your voice, using your templates and clinical framework. Invoices generated and sent automatically after sessions. Scheduling held, reminders sent, follow-ups handled. The operational layer of your practice — the part that has nothing to do with clinical work but has historically consumed enormous amounts of time — runs in the background, without adding unnecessary weight to your day. Paige doesn't ask you to adapt to a system. She adapts to yours.

The clinical layer

During note review, Paige may surface observations she has noticed across a client's sessions — patterns in how they engage, threads that have appeared more than once, shifts in language or tone that might be worth holding. She offers these as observations, not conclusions. The clinical meaning of what she notices belongs entirely to you. She is also available whenever you want to think alongside her — about a client, about something you noticed in a session, about a pattern you are trying to understand. She will reflect, offer perspective, and ask careful questions. She will not tell you what to do. Paige notices. She never concludes. That line is intentional, and it never moves.

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The client record

Paige keeps the client record current and whole. After sessions, she can generate a plain-language summary — written for the client, not the clinical file — that you can review and share with your client. She holds session history, tracks the arc of the therapeutic relationship over time, and makes sure the information you need is there when you need it. She also has a view across your whole practice — not just one client, but all of them. She can surface patterns, flag things worth your attention, and help you hold the fuller picture of your caseload.

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The financial picture

Paige can answer questions about your practice finances directly — revenue, outstanding balances, session volume, trends over time. You don't need to generate a report or open a spreadsheet (but those are available, if you prefer). You can simply ask, and she will surface what you need. The business side of your practice stays legible without pulling your attention away from your clients.

How Paige works — and where she stops.

We want to be precise about this, because it matters. Paige is an AI, and AI in clinical settings raises legitimate questions. What does she do with what she hears? How much does she interpret? Where is the line between helpful support and inappropriate influence on clinical judgment? We have thought carefully about all of these questions, and the answers are built into how Paige is designed.

She notices. She never concludes.

When Paige surfaces a clinical observation, she does so as an observation — specific, grounded, and offered for your consideration. She might say: "I've noticed she tends to return to this theme — are you tracking that too?" She reports what she has seen. She does not tell you what it means. The clinical judgment is always, entirely yours.

She offers perspective. She never directs.

When you bring Paige a clinical question or want to think through something together, she will engage thoughtfully — asking questions, reflecting back, offering possibilities. She will not tell you what to do with a client, prescribe a clinical approach, or position herself as knowing better than you what the therapeutic relationship requires. She is a thinking partner. The clinical authority stays with you.

She works within your framework.

Paige does not arrive with a clinical philosophy of her own. She learns yours — your theoretical orientation, your documentation preferences, your communication style, the way you think about your clients. Everything she produces is informed by how you work, not by a generic model of what therapy should look like.

She is private, secure, and compliant.

Everything Paige handles — session content, client records, clinical observations, financial data — is encrypted and held within a platform built to meet PHIPA requirements in Canada and HIPAA requirements in the US. Your clients' information is private. Your clinical thinking is private. Paige works within that boundary, always.

Paige over time.

From day one, Paige works from what you give her — your templates, your clinical framework, the records already in your practice. She is useful immediately.

Over time, she becomes more attuned. She learns the patterns in how you write, the way you think about particular clients, the things you tend to notice and the things you tend to come back to. The platform grows more responsive to you as it learns more about how you work. This is something we are building deliberately and carefully — because getting it right matters more than getting it fast.

Questions therapists actually ask about Paige.

Paige works from what you bring into the platform — session transcripts generated from session audio, session notes, information you record in client profiles. She does not have passive access to your sessions. You control what enters the system, and Paige works with that.

Paige is designed to notice and reflect, not to interpret or direct. When she surfaces something she has observed across a client's sessions, she frames it as a specific observation and checks it against your clinical experience — something to consider, not something to act on. The clinical weight of what she notices always stays with you.

Paige produces drafts. You review, shape, and sign off on every note before it becomes a clinical record. The professional and legal accountability for your documentation is always yours — Paige makes the process lighter, but she does not remove your judgment from it. Every note you publish reflects your clinical experience, because you have reviewed and approved it.

Yes. Paige works within whatever framework you practice from. You configure your templates, your clinical orientation, and your documentation preferences — and Paige produces notes, observations, and support that reflect those choices. She does not impose a clinical model.

Yes. Kindred Practice is built to meet PHIPA requirements in Canada and HIPAA requirements in the US. All client data, session content, and clinical information is encrypted in transit and at rest. Paige operates entirely within that secure environment. You can read more about data privacy and security in our Privacy Policy.

Yes. Clients must be informed about the use of AI in their care, and obtaining that consent is your responsibility as the clinician. Kindred Practice provides the platform; ensuring that your use of it meets your regulatory obligations, your professional College's requirements, and applicable data privacy legislation — including PHIPA in Canada and HIPAA in the US — is yours to manage. We recommend reviewing your regulatory body's current guidance on AI-assisted documentation and building it into your informed consent process from the start.

The work you do is heavy at times. Let Paige carry what she can.

Kindred Practice is built for the therapist in the room — not just the practice around them. Try it free for 14 days and experience what changes when someone is finally in your corner.