The founders of Fitbit, James Park and Eric Friedman, have introduced a new AI-focused startup called Luffu, positioning it as a tool designed to help families keep track of health-related information in a more coordinated way. The platform is framed as an “intelligent family care system” that begins with a mobile app and is expected to expand into hardware over time.
Park and Friedman, who previously sold Fitbit to Google, are turning their attention from individual fitness tracking to the broader and often fragmented reality of family caregiving. Their move comes as caregiving responsibilities continue to rise in the United States. Recent data shows that roughly 63 million U.S. adults now serve as family caregivers, a figure that has grown significantly over the past decade and reflects the increasing complexity of managing health across households.
Luffu is designed to work largely in the background, using AI to collect and organize family information, learn everyday routines, and flag changes that may warrant attention. The goal is not constant surveillance, but early awareness—surfacing patterns or anomalies that could point to emerging health concerns while reducing the need for frequent check-ins. Park has described the idea as a response to his own experience managing his parents’ care remotely, navigating multiple health portals, and dealing with gaps in communication without wanting to feel intrusive.
The founders argue that most consumer health tools are still built around individuals, even though real-world health management often involves partners, children, aging parents, and even pets. Information is typically scattered across apps, provider portals, calendars, paper documents, and informal notes. Luffu attempts to consolidate this into a single system where families can log and review shared health details.
Within the app, users can track a wide range of information, including medications, symptoms, diet, lab results, appointments, and basic health metrics. Data can be added through text, voice input, or photos, reflecting how information often surfaces in daily life rather than in structured sessions. The system then analyzes this input to highlight changes such as shifts in sleep patterns, missed medications, or unusual vitals.
According to comments the founders shared with Axios, Luffu also supports natural-language questions. Family members can ask practical, contextual queries like whether a diet change appears to correlate with blood pressure readings or whether a medication was administered, including for pets. This conversational layer is intended to make the data easier to access without requiring users to sift through dashboards or logs.
Luffu is not yet widely available. Interested users can currently sign up for a waitlist ahead of a limited public beta. While the product is still early, it reflects a broader shift in digital health toward shared care models and AI-assisted organization rather than purely self-focused tracking.
