Forsyth County sophomores launch Aivon AI medical app for preventive care
Two Forsyth County sophomores launched Aivon Inc., an AI-driven medical app to help residents track preventive care, screenings and vaccinations.

Two Forsyth County high school sophomores have launched Aivon Inc., an AI-driven medical platform designed to help residents keep up with preventive care. The app, publicly introduced on January 22, 2026, aims to translate medical records into concise summaries, issue reminders for screenings and vaccinations, and provide AI-generated explanations of health metrics so users can act earlier on preventive needs.
Aivon was co-founded by Dev Gupta of Alliance Academy for Innovation and Joshua Reljac of West Forsyth. The duo built the first prototype in a basement during the summer of 2024, then moved to pilot testing with family and friends to refine features and workflows. The founders say the early testing focused on usability - helping users understand lab values and calendar-based reminders for mammograms, colonoscopies and routine immunizations - before seeking broader clinical input.

The app’s core functions include aggregating medical documents into readable summaries, sending reminders for recommended screenings and vaccinations, and using AI to produce plain-language explanations of health metrics. Aivon’s founders plan a wider rollout and are pursuing regulatory compliance and partnerships with clinicians to integrate the platform into local care pathways. Those partnerships are intended to align the app’s recommendations with clinical practice and to support clinician oversight as users act on AI-generated guidance.
For Forsyth County residents, the app promises practical public health benefits. Increased adherence to preventive screenings can detect disease earlier, reduce late-stage treatment needs, and ease pressure on emergency services. In communities where transportation, work schedules and childcare create barriers to routine care, an easy-to-use reminder and explanation tool could help reduce missed appointments and improve vaccination rates. Local clinicians and public health officials will be critical to ensuring recommendations reflect up-to-date guidelines and equitable access.
Aivon’s origins as a student project highlight a growing intersection between youth entrepreneurship and community health innovation. Dev Gupta and Joshua Reljac translated a summer basement prototype into a company that seeks to partner with clinicians and pursue compliance steps that could allow the platform to operate safely within local healthcare systems.
What comes next for Forsyth County is whether clinician partners and community organizations choose to adopt the platform and how quickly Aivon can demonstrate measurable improvements in screening and vaccination uptake. For residents, the arrival of a locally developed tool offers a new way to stay ahead of the curve on preventive care and to bring clearer explanations of health numbers into everyday conversations with family and providers.
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