Inspiration During a hospital visit, I saw how difficult it was for people—especially in small towns and rural areas—to access quality healthcare. Doctors were overwhelmed, patients had to wait for hours, and most still carried physical files with no digital records. Students who wanted to learn medicine had limited access to good resources unless they paid a lot or lived in cities.

That’s when I thought: What if I could build one simple app that connects doctors, students, and patients in one ecosystem?

I imagined a platform where:

A doctor in one city could consult a patient in a village

A student could learn anatomy through 3D models and real-world case studies

A patient could store all their medical records online and never worry about losing them

AI could guide someone through basic health questions—without replacing doctors, but helping them

That idea became Apexicare.

I built this alone, not just for a hackathon—but because I genuinely believe that premium healthcare should be a right, not a privilege. Apexicare is my small step toward that vision.

What it does Apexicare is an all-in-one healthcare platform that connects doctors, patients, and medical students—making quality care and medical knowledge more accessible to everyone.

Patients can easily book video consultations with verified doctors, ask health-related questions to an AI assistant, and store all their medical records digitally—no more paper files or confusion. They can even add family members to their profile for emergency access, so if anything happens, help is just a click away.

Doctors can manage appointments, host 1-on-1 video consults, and also share their expertise by posting medical content, case studies, or even selling full courses to students and the public.

Medical students get their own dashboard where they can watch video lectures, explore interactive 3D anatomy models, take notes, and get help from an AI-powered tutor built into the app.

Everything is designed to feel simple, modern, and connected—so that no matter who you are or where you are, you can access smarter, safer healthcare from your phone or computer How we built it I built Apexicare completely on my own, without a big team or fancy setup—just with a strong vision and the help of no-code tools.

I used Bolt.new to build the entire app from backend to frontend. I had never used Bolt before, so I had to learn everything from scratch. I broke the app multiple times and rebuilt it again and again. It was frustrating at times, but every rebuild taught me something and brought me closer to a working MVP.

I created custom roles for doctors, students, and public users, then used Bolt’s visual logic to connect things like appointment booking, AI chat, and study dashboards. I integrated OpenAI to build a smart health assistant that can answer basic medical questions. I added Sketchfab to bring in 3D anatomy models for medical students, and planned the video calling flow using Twilio/WebRTC for real-time doctor consultations.

I didn't know exactly how to build everything when I started, but I figured it out step-by-step, testing, fixing, and improving the platform piece by piece. And that’s what makes me proud—I took an idea and turned it into something real, from nothing Challenges we ran into When I started building Apexicare, I honestly had no idea how to use Bolt.new. I had to figure everything out from scratch — the workflows, data models, UI, logic — all of it. I broke the app multiple times. Each time I tried to add a new feature, something else would stop working. It was frustrating and exhausting. But every mistake helped me understand how to build it better.

I built this whole project completely alone. No team, no outside help — just me. Managing everything, from user roles to design to API integration, wasn’t easy. It took time, patience, and a lot of trial and error.

One of the hardest parts was setting up the app for three different users (Doctors, Students, Public). Each needed their own dashboard, flows, and permissions. It took a while to structure it all correctly without breaking the logic.

Integrating video calling with WebRTC/Twilio and adding AI with OpenAI was also tricky. Bolt makes things easier, but some advanced things still required workarounds, testing, and rebuilding.

Even though I had to restart several times, I kept going because I believed in the idea. That’s what matters. Accomplishments that we're proud of I’m proud that I learned how to build a real app from scratch, even though I didn’t know how to use Bolt.new at the beginning. I figured it out by testing, failing, breaking things, and rebuilding again and again.

I built everything alone — the UI, backend logic, database, AI integration, and design. It wasn’t perfect, and some things were buggy at first, but I didn’t give up.

This hackathon gave me the push I needed to finally start building the product I’ve been dreaming about — a real healthcare platform that could help people. Apexicare is not just a project for me, it’s the start of something much bigger.

Even if it’s not perfect yet, I’m proud I finished what I started, and that I now have something real I can keep improving. What we learned Before this project, I had never used Bolt.new. I didn’t even know where to start. But I learned everything by doing — breaking things, fixing them, and trying again. That process taught me how to actually build a full SaaS product, step by step.

I learned how to:

Set up a real backend using Bolt’s no-code logic

Create user roles like Doctor, Student, and Public

Build workflows, design UI screens, and connect APIs

Add OpenAI for the AI assistant and Sketchfab for 3D models

Structure a full healthcare app on my own

Most importantly, I learned that you don’t need to be perfect or have a big team to build something meaningful. You just need to start.

This experience gave me confidence. Now I know that if I can build this MVP alone, I can build much more in the future.

What's next for APEXICARE This is just the beginning.

In the future, I want to make Apexicare a full product that people actually use in real life — not just a hackathon project. I want it to be available as a mobile app, so users can access healthcare and learning anytime, anywhere.

I also want to let doctors sell their own video courses and case studies, so students and even the public can learn from real experts, and doctors can earn from their knowledge.

But one of the biggest things I want to build is a smart health wristband — a product that connects directly with the Apexicare app. It will:

Track your heart rate, steps, sleep, and more

Store all your medical records and history inside — so you don’t need to carry files again

Let you add family members, so they get alerts in case of an emergency

Work together with the app to give you real-time insights and faster help

And most importantly, I want to make premium healthcare services accessible for everyone, not just the rich or people in big cities. With AI, digital records, and smart tools, Apexicare can help solve real-world problems — especially in rural and underserved areas.

This is more than an app. It’s a step toward the future of healthcare.

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