Colleen Hurley Elliot, RD, BCPA

Health is complicated. Knowing who to call shouldn't be.

Whether you are carrying a formal responsibility for someone's care, simply trying to help a person you love, or feeling lost yourself in navigating the healthcare system: the first step is a conversation.

Health decisions deserve the same rigor as financial ones.

Whole Chart Health brings board-certified clinical expertise to the people responsible for a loved one's or client's care so the medical picture is as well-managed as the financial one.

More than 70% of U.S. adults report dissatisfaction with the healthcare system.

For someone managing a complex diagnosis, or managing it on another person's behalf , the system's fragmentation isn't just frustrating.

It's a risk.

When care is spread across providers, no one is holding the whole story.

A cardiologist sees the heart. An endocrinologist sees the thyroid. A primary care physician sees fifteen minutes twice a year. Medications interact. Nutrition status shifts. Records sit in separate portals. And the person at the center or the trustee, agent, or family member responsible for them,is left to connect the dots alone.

Whole Chart Health exists for exactly that gap.

What makes this different

Patient advocacy is largely an unlicensed field. Whole Chart Health is not.

Colleen Hurley Elliot is a Registered Dietitian and a Board Certified Patient Advocate; clinical training paired with formal advocacy credentials. That means the work product isn't general guidance. It's clinical judgment, documented to a professional standard, that the people relying on it can actually rely on.

Who this Serves

Fiduciaries, trustees, and estate planners

When your responsibility includes a client's wellbeing, you need clinical expertise you can call on and documentation you can stand behind. Whole Chart Health handles the medical picture so you can focus on financial administration.

Adult children and families

Overseeing a parent's care from across town or across the country, and worried something is being missed. You don't need a medical background to act in their best interest, you need someone who has one.

Individuals navigating complex care

A chronic condition, a new diagnosis, or a medical picture that has simply grown too complicated to manage in fifteen-minute appointments.