Jawra exists to do what a 10-minute appointment can't: be present every day, watch the small things, and help the body re-learn what it was supposed to do all along.
Most TMJ care is shaped by appointment cadence — a thirty-minute window every six weeks, where the patient has to remember what's happening in their body when they aren't there. We think that's backwards. The app should hold the continuity; the clinician should hold the judgement.
Jawra is built around three commitments: respect the patient's intelligence, respect the clinician's time, and respect the data that gets entrusted to us.
Jawra is developed in collaboration with biological dentists, airway-trained ENTs, osteopaths, and orofacial pain researchers — bridging the gap between specialist clinics and daily patient habits.
Jawra is the first tool that lets us hand the patient something to do at home — and trust that what they're doing is the right dose, the right form, at the right time.
A small team in Montréal, Sydney, and Newcastle — with backgrounds in orofacial pain, computer vision, and stubborn personal experience.
Former Apple Health PM. Two CBCT scans, three night guards, no answers — until she started building one.
Orofacial pain specialist, 14 years in practice. Co-investigator on the airway-myofunctional pilot.
Computer-vision lead. Previously on the face-tracking team for an augmented-reality fitness app.
Lifelong TMJ patient. Believes a calm interface is a clinical intervention.
For partnerships, clinical questions, press, or just to tell us what's working and what isn't — we read everything.