Your consultation keeps getting interrupted by a question you've answered a thousand times
You're an internist. Your day is a string of complex patients: the uncontrolled blood pressure, the metformin adjustment, the lab panel that needs a careful read. And in the middle of all that, your phone buzzes.
It isn't an emergency. It's the same old question:
- "Doctor, what time do you see patients tomorrow?"
- "Where is your office?"
- "How much is the first visit?"
- "Do I need to fast for the bloodwork?"
Each of these looks harmless. The problem is the volume. An internist with a full schedule gets 30 to 60 WhatsApp messages a day, and roughly 7 out of 10 are questions already answered earlier that same week. If each one steals two minutes of your attention —reading it, switching context, replying, getting back to the patient in front of you— you're giving away more than an hour of your day to tasks that don't require a physician.
The alternative is worse: not replying at all. Because a patient who doesn't get an answer within the first hour simply finds another internist.
What you lose when you don't reply in time
Internal medicine patients aren't impulsive. They arrive referred, they compared, they read up. But when they message you on WhatsApp, they expect a response the way they expect a response from any business in 2026: now.
The numbers are clear:
- More than half of patients who message a practice expect a reply in under 15 minutes.
- One in three new consultations is lost simply because nobody answered the message in time.
- A patient who doesn't hear back doesn't follow up: they book with the next doctor on their list.
You're not ignoring anyone. You're in a procedure, reading an MRI, or finally eating lunch. But to the patient on the other end, silence feels the same: like they don't matter to you.
A receptionist who never tires, never leaves, and never sleeps
Imagine every one of those messages getting a correct, warm, professional answer in seconds, at 11 p.m. or on a Sunday, without you ever touching your phone.
That's an AI agent connected to your WhatsApp. It works like a full-time receptionist, with three differences: it never gets sick, it never takes a break, and it handles ten patients at once without making a mistake.
What it answers for you
The agent knows your practice the way your best assistant does:
- Hours: "The doctor sees patients Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m."
- Location: it sends the exact address, the map, and even where to park.
- Costs: first visit, follow-up, whatever you decide to share.
- Prep: "Your thyroid panel requires 8 hours of fasting; water is allowed."
And it does it in your tone. If you're formal, the agent is formal. If you're warm with your patients, so is the agent.
What it does beyond answering
It doesn't just reply. It books the appointment straight into your calendar. It reminds the patient the day before so they don't miss it. It follows up with anyone who asked but didn't book. And when something comes up that truly needs your clinical judgment —a warning symptom, a real emergency— it hands it to you immediately, flagged as a priority.
You only see what matters.
Your name, as a brand
There's a second half to this that few doctors take advantage of: your personal brand.
Today, when a patient searches for you on Google, they probably find a generic directory, a stray review, or nothing at all. That doesn't match your level.
Catalizadora builds you your own site —something like dryourname.com— where patients find who you are, your background, your areas of focus, and a button to message you that lands straight in the WhatsApp agent. Your name stops being a loose data point on the internet and becomes a brand that earns trust before the first visit.
What the result looks like on your schedule
An internist who turns this system on typically reports, within the first few weeks:
- Zero repetitive questions stealing time from the consultation.
- Patients answered in seconds, 24/7, even at dawn and on weekends.
- Fewer no-shows thanks to automatic reminders.
- A fuller schedule, because the patients who message after hours no longer slip away.
It isn't magic and it isn't complicated. It's simply no longer doing by hand something a tool does better.
What this is not
It's worth being clear about what this isn't, because the word "agent" makes some physicians nervous. This isn't a chatbot that pretends to be a doctor. It doesn't diagnose, it doesn't prescribe, and it doesn't give medical opinions. Its job is the front desk: information, scheduling, reminders, follow-up. The moment a conversation drifts toward symptoms, results, or anything that requires your judgment, it stops and hands the patient to you. Think of it as the most reliable receptionist you've ever had —one who knows exactly when a question is above their pay grade and never improvises a medical answer.
It also isn't a system you have to babysit. You don't log into a dashboard every morning, you don't reset anything, you don't troubleshoot. It runs in the background and you keep doing what you do: seeing patients. The only time it pulls you in is when a real patient genuinely needs you.
Up and running in 15 days, and it's yours
Catalizadora builds your WhatsApp agent and your personal site in 15 days, for a one-time investment of 4,500 dollars. No monthly fees and no rentals: the system is 100% yours, in your name. You're not renting your digital practice from anyone.
You don't need to know anything about technology. You stay the doctor; we handle everything else.
The first step
Message your future WhatsApp agent to see it in action, or book a demo of 20 minutes where we show you exactly how it would respond to your patients: https://cal.com/pablo-estrada-hlqaql.
Your consultation is for your patients. The repeated questions are for your agent.