Questions, bug reports, content corrections, or feature requests — reach out and we'll get back to you as quickly as we can.
Accuracy matters to us. If you believe any scan protocol, probe-positioning instruction, labeled image, finding, calculator, or reference is incorrect or out of date, please let us know. Include the system and view (for example, "Cardiac → PLAX") and the specific item in question, along with a supporting citation if you have one.
Most of it, yes. All core reference content — scan protocols, probe positioning, images, cine clips, 3D models, and calculators — is bundled with the app and available without a connection. The one exception is Case of the Week, which loads its content from Apple's CloudKit, so it needs an internet connection to fetch new cases; once a case has loaded, it's cached on your device for offline viewing.
Your logbook and certification counts are stored on your device. If you're signed into iCloud, they also sync across your own Apple devices via iCloud — that copy lives in your personal Apple account, not on our servers (we don't operate any), and we can't access it. Deleting the app removes the copy stored on your device.
Pocket POCUS is a universal app for iPhone and iPad. We aim to support recent iOS and iPadOS versions; see the App Store listing for current requirements once the app is live.
No. Pocket POCUS is an educational and reference tool only. It does not interpret images, provide medical advice, or make clinical decisions, and it does not replace formal training, supervision, credentialing, or your institution's policies and protocols. Always rely on your own clinical judgment and follow the rules that govern your practice. See our Terms of Use.
No. Please do not enter any patient-identifying information. The app is a reference and personal-training tool, not a medical record. Logbook entries are meant to describe your own training experience, not individual patients. See our Privacy Policy.