Conditions
Diabetes, blood pressure, thyroid and more — per member. The plan favours meals that fit each condition instead of handing everyone the same generic diet chart.
KitchenOS plans meals around real health needs — diabetes, blood pressure, allergies, the medicines in the house. That only works if we're straight with you about what the app does, what it never does, and who sees what. This page is the straight answer.
Each person in your household gets their own profile — health conditions, allergies, doctor-prescribed dietary restrictions, and plain likes and dislikes. Every weekly plan is generated against all of them at once, so the same dinner can work for a parent watching their sugar and a child with a nut allergy.
Diabetes, blood pressure, thyroid and more — per member. The plan favours meals that fit each condition instead of handing everyone the same generic diet chart.
Per-member allergy flags steer the week's meals away from trigger ingredients. Honestly, though: allergen tagging is a help, not a guarantee — for a known allergy, you should still read labels and confirm ingredient safety yourself.
Vegetarian members, doctor-prescribed restrictions, fasting days, and ordinary likes and dislikes all shape the plan — so the food still feels like your family's food.
Health details are Sensitive Personal Data under India's DPDP Act, and we treat them that way — collected only with your explicit, informed consent, used only for meal planning, and deletable at any time (see your controls below).
If someone in the house is on metformin, warfarin, or thyroid medication, KitchenOS can flag foods that are known to interact. Those alerts come from a deterministic, curated interaction ruleset — the same food rule applied the same way every time, never invented by an AI model. They're built to help you ask better questions, and they are not a substitute for your doctor or pharmacist.
The right way to use an alert: see the flag, keep it in mind, and discuss it with your doctor or pharmacist at the next opportunity. Don't change your medicines or your diet on the app's word alone — and in an emergency, contact your doctor or call 112.
Read the full safety note in our Terms.
Advisory, deterministic, transparent.
Interaction alerts are rule-based and curated — never invented by a model. They may not be exhaustive, and they never replace professional medical advice. KitchenOS is a planning tool, not a medical service.
AI models can hallucinate and vary from run to run — that's not acceptable for safety. So drug-food alerts come from a rules-based ruleset we curate ourselves, kept entirely out of the AI path. The ruleset is advisory-only and pending pharmacist review; it is designed to flag known interactions, but it may not catch everything.
Your account, household, health, and meal data are stored and processed in Google Cloud's Mumbai region (asia-south1) — the database, file storage, and the app's backend logic all run there. Nothing is stored at rest outside India.
The one exception is the AI meal-suggestion step. Some AI features call third-party model providers to generate suggestions; we send only a minimised, de-identified prompt — household role, age band, dietary preferences, and pantry items — and never your medication names or free-text health notes. That data is transient and is not stored at rest abroad. The full detail is in our Privacy Policy.
These are your rights under India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 — and we've made them self-serve. Everything below lives inside the app under Settings, so you exercise it yourself: no email, no waiting.
Get a machine-readable copy of every personal data record we hold about you — a JSON bundle delivered through a time-limited download link.
Turn off any specific processing purpose — AI meal planning, drug-food guidance, photo logging — without deleting your whole account. The dependent features switch off with it.
By default your data is not used to train any AI model. If we ever want to use anonymised, aggregated patterns to improve our prompts, that's a granular opt-in you control — and the default stays opt-out.
Deleting your account starts a 30-day grace period; sign back in within those 30 days to cancel. After that, everything we hold is permanently purged — household, health profiles, medications, meal history, and your uploaded files such as photos and voice clips.
Questions about your data? Write to privacy@ganakys.com. Formal complaints go to grievance@ganakys.com — we acknowledge within 7 days and aim to resolve within 30 days, per DPDP §13(3).
Our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service say all of this in full, binding detail — what we collect, where it lives, and where the line sits between helpful guidance and medical advice. Read them, then hold us to them.
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