About Viantra

Viantra is a Canadian health technology company with a simple goal: use technology gently and responsibly to help people receive better care, starting from the community level.

Our mission

To create calm, human-centered digital tools that make primary healthcare more accessible, more supportive, and more equitable— especially for communities that are often overlooked.

Our purpose

We believe that everyone, regardless of income, geography, or circumstance, deserves a fair chance to understand their health and reach timely care. We exist to support the people who carry that responsibility every day: community health workers, local doctors, volunteers, and NGOs.

Shaped by Canadian values

Being based in Canada influences more than our address—it shapes our ethics. We draw from a culture that values universal healthcare, fairness, diversity, and quiet reliability.

That means:

  • We design for dignity, making sure people feel respected, not reduced to data.
  • We prioritize equity, asking how our tools can help those with the least access first.
  • We favour collaboration over competition, working alongside NGOs and local partners instead of replacing them.
  • We stay humble and transparent, owning our limits and learning openly from the communities we serve.

At Viantra, “Canadian tech” doesn't mean flashy or aggressive—it means thoughtful, inclusive, and grounded in a sense of shared responsibility.

How we measure success

We are not trying to become a massive company. Our goal is to stay lean, sustainable, and focused on building tools that genuinely help. Success for us looks like:

  • A community health worker feeling less alone in their work.
  • A local doctor receiving better information, earlier.
  • A worried parent getting clear guidance at the right time.
  • An NGO partner saying, “This makes our job easier, not harder.”

If our work quietly improves moments like these, then Viantra is doing what it was created to do.

Viantra’s tools are designed to support awareness and connection, not to replace medical assessment, diagnosis, or professional care. Individuals should always seek guidance from qualified healthcare providers for medical concerns.

Legal & Ethics