
January AI’s platform helps track consumer habits, integrating nutrition with healthcare
Key takeaways
- January AI’s Clinical Nutrition Monitor has qualified as a solution on the Mayo Clinic Platform, aiming to help clinicians track patients’ diets, BMIs, body weights, and medications.
- The app allows patients to log meals via photos, barcode scans, or search, turning everyday nutrition habits into longitudinal data for clinical workflows.
- The move reflects growing momentum around integrating nutrition into healthcare, alongside Food is Medicine initiatives and calls for stronger nutrition standards in clinical care.
Precision health company January AI has announced that its Clinical Nutrition Monitor is qualified as an integrated solution within healthcare on the Mayo Clinic Platform. In the app, patients log meals, giving clinicians longitudinal nutrition data to more easily track diet, body mass index (BMI), body weight, and medications in a smoother workflow.
The company stresses that healthcare professionals do not know what patients eat in between appointments, and that there is currently a lack of connection between dietary patterns and clinical outcomes
The AI company aims to address this challenge by providing an app that is easy to use for consumers by logging a picture, barcode scan, or search. These, together with other health data, are then accessible to the clinicians for a full overview

“What patients eat between appointments profoundly shapes outcomes, yet that information has remained largely invisible to clinicians,” says Noosheen Hashemi, founder and CEO of January AI. “We built the Clinician Nutrition Monitor to bridge that gap.”
Nutritional tool for healthcare
The Mayo Clinic Platform supports digital health solutions developers to bring their products to real-world settings and ease clinical and administrative workflows with digital infrastructure and ecosystems
The Clinical Nutrition Monitor helps healthcare professionals summarize nutrition, medication, and weight data to specify how dietary patterns influence treatment response.
The app helps healthcare professionals summarize nutrition, medication, and weight data.“The Mayo Clinic Platform is committed to helping empower practical, impactful solutions to enhance patient care,” says Steve Bethke, VP of Solution Developer Market at the Mayo Clinic Platform.
“Through a rigorous qualification process, each solution is evaluated to meet high standards for fairness, accuracy, and intended use.”
Hashemi says that healthcare has “historically been built around snapshots, but behavior happens every day.”
“What patients eat between appointments profoundly shapes outcomes, yet that information has remained largely invisible to clinicians. We built the Clinician Nutrition Monitor to bridge that gap by bringing longitudinal nutrition data directly into existing workflows. Qualification on the Mayo Clinic Platform represents an important milestone as we work to make nutrition a measurable and actionable part of clinical care.”
Medicine and nutrition intertwine
Integrating nutrition into health care has been urged by the Physicians Association for Nutrition (IPAN) International earlier this year, arguing it is crucial to promote healthy diets while empowering professionals.
IPAN previously told Nutrition Insight how the shift opens the door for policymakers to step up and set standards, incentives, and accountability mechanisms that align with preventive care and dietary strategies. It also presents an innovation opportunity for the nutrition industry to reformulate products into healthier alternatives
For instance, in many GLP-1 clinical trials, there is little recorded diet quality and food intake of patients, leaving the industry to navigate an “incomplete” landscape. This points to a need for more data about what consumers are eating so that innovations are better informed
In other moves bridging healthcare with nutrition, the Food Is Medicine Coalition and Harvard Law School released a “first-of-its-kind” national framework designed to inform hospital professionals how to introduce medically tailored meals into the US healthcare system
Consumers also demand a more nutrition-based medical system. Last year, a survey commissioned by The Rockefeller Foundation reported that nearly nine in 10 patients prefer to rely more on healthy eating rather than medications to manage their condition. Surveyed US citizens of all demographics and political backgrounds consider Food is Medicine programs an effective, commonsense part of treating and managing chronic illness
All content and features on this website are copyrighted with all rights reserved. The full details can be found in our privacy statement

Save in your AIChatGPTGoogle AIClaudePerplexityGrok



Nutrition Insight
Register now

JUL
12
2026
IFT first 2026
McCormick Place, Chicago
AUG
25
2026
CPHI Korea 2026
COEX, Seoul, Korea
SEP
8
2026
Growtech Middle East
Sheikh Saeed Hall 1, Dubai World Trade Center, Dubai, UAE
By continuing to browse our site you agree to ourPrivacy Statement
![]()

