Amina FAQ

Answers about Amina, the caregiver newsletter, family coordination, consent, and safety boundaries.

What does Amina do for family caregivers?

Amina helps a primary caregiver keep relatives informed, turn vague offers into specific help, and collect local caregiver resources into a calm monthly update. The caregiver stays in control of what is sent and who receives it.

Is Amina for medical, legal, or financial advice?

No. Amina can organize family context, surface cited public information, and help you prepare questions. It does not diagnose, prescribe, interpret benefits eligibility as fact, give legal guidance, or recommend financial actions.

How does the free caregiver newsletter work?

You share a county or ZIP code and a few caregiving concerns. Amina checks public local sources and sends practical updates such as caregiver programs, respite resources, library sessions, agency notices, and resource changes when there is something concrete to report.

Will Amina message my family automatically?

No proactive message goes out without consent, verified contact details, and the required approval gates. Amina is designed for quiet, useful coordination, not constant notifications.

Who is Amina built for?

Amina is built for overwhelmed adult children and family caregivers who are coordinating care for an aging parent while trying to keep siblings, relatives, and close supporters aligned.

What should I try first?

Start with the free care situation scan or the local caregiver newsletter. Both are meant to give you a low-pressure first step before deciding whether you want Amina to help coordinate more of the family follow-through.