The gap in your schedule has a name: the patient who didn't show
If you practice geriatrics, you know the scene. You blocked 40 minutes for an assessment. The hour arrives and the chair is empty. No one called. That slot is gone for good: you didn't see that patient, and you didn't see anyone who could have taken the spot.
In general practice, patients who miss their appointment (what's known as no-shows) run somewhere between 15% and 30%. In geriatrics the problem gets worse for very concrete reasons: the older patient forgets the date more easily, often depends on a son, daughter or caregiver to get there, and when that companion can't make it, the appointment is simply lost without a single heads-up.
Run the numbers on your own schedule. If you see 8 patients a day and 2 don't show, you're losing one in four visits. Over a month, that's dozens of empty slots you could have filled.
Why old-school reminders fall short
The classic fix is to ask your front-desk staff to call the day before. The trouble is that the call takes time, people often don't pick up, and when your staff is busy running the office, reminder calls drop to the bottom of the to-do list. The result: they get done halfway, or not at all.
A lone text message doesn't work well with this population either. The older patient ignores it, doesn't know how to reply, or a relative spots it three days later. And when someone does reply "I can't make that day," the conversation stops there: no one offers another date on the spot, so the appointment disappears instead of moving to a different slot.
The hidden cost of every gap
The problem isn't just the empty chair. It's the chain of effects it drags along. The daughter who was going to drive her mother took time off work for nothing. The caregiver arranged transport and waited around. And the next time that family needs to book, they remember the bad experience and hesitate to come back. A clear, timely reminder doesn't just fill your schedule: it protects the relationship with families who have plenty of other options.
An agent on your WhatsApp that reminds, confirms and reschedules on its own
Picture this: every patient with an appointment gets a warm, clear message on WhatsApp: "Good afternoon, this is a reminder of your appointment with Dr. [your name] on Thursday at 10:00. Will you be able to attend?" And when the patient —or their daughter, or their caregiver— replies, the message doesn't fall into a void: someone answers right away.
That someone is an artificial intelligence agent that works as your secretary, 24 hours a day, inside your WhatsApp. It's not a cold "press 1, press 2" robot. It talks naturally, understands the answers and takes action:
- Reminds patients of the appointment at the right lead time, then reminds again on the day.
- Confirms or reschedules. If the patient can't make Thursday, the agent offers another day and moves the appointment without you stepping in.
- Frees up the slot. If someone cancels, that gap becomes available and the agent can offer it to another patient on the waiting list.
- Answers instantly. When a relative writes at 9 p.m. asking about their mother's appointment, the agent replies right then, not the next morning.
The payoff is direct: fewer empty chairs, a schedule that stays full, and patients who actually show up because they got a clear reminder, on time.
The elderly patient and their family, cared for without friction
What makes this so valuable in geriatrics is that the agent talks to both the patient and whoever cares for them. A family that gets a friendly reminder and can clear up doubts instantly trusts you more. That trust is what brings them back and gets you referrals.
Tone matters, a great deal. A dry, automated message is nothing like a warm one that calls the patient by name and feels as if your own secretary wrote it. The agent talks with that kind of care, because for an older adult and their family, the way they're treated from the very first message is already part of the care they receive.
What this means for your day
You don't have to learn anything technical. There are no new apps to master, no complicated dashboards. You keep seeing your patients; the agent handles the reminders, the confirmations and the messages that go unanswered today.
For your front-desk staff, far from replacing them, it lifts the most repetitive task off their shoulders —calling patients one by one— so they can focus on welcoming whoever walks in and nurturing the relationship with each patient.
Concrete numbers
Say you cut no-shows from 25% down to 10%. If you see 160 patients a month, that's 24 recovered visits. At your rate, that figure pays for the whole system many times over. And the system has no monthly fees.
How we get started
At Catalizadora we set up your WhatsApp agent in 15 days. The launch cost is $4,500 dollars, with no monthly fees, and the system becomes 100% yours: you own the code, you don't rent it.
The first step is a short conversation to look at your schedule and the way you work. Book a demo here: https://cal.com/pablo-estrada-hlqaql. We'll show you, with a real example, how your agent would look reminding patients and caring for them from day one.
A full schedule starts with someone answering the WhatsApp. Let that someone work for you, all day, every day.