Fever: What Is It, and How to Book a Consultation Service for Its Treatment Through StrongBody
Fever is defined as a temporary rise in body temperature, often caused by an underlying illness or inflammatory condition. Medically, a fever is present when body temperature exceeds 38°C (100.4°F), and it represents the body’s natural immune response to infection, injury, or disease.
While fever is common and usually associated with viral or bacterial infections, persistent or recurrent fever—especially when it is low-grade and unexplained—may indicate more serious conditions such as autoimmune diseases or cancer. It can be accompanied by other symptoms like chills, sweating, fatigue, or localized pain, and it often disrupts sleep, daily activity, and emotional well-being.
Notably, in certain malignancies such as fever by Ewing’s sarcoma, fever serves as an early warning sign. In these cases, it reflects the inflammatory response to tumor growth and tissue destruction. Such presentations warrant careful evaluation, especially when fever coexists with bone pain or swelling in young individuals.
Ewing’s sarcoma is a rare, aggressive cancer that arises from bones or soft tissue. Most commonly found in children and adolescents aged 10 to 20, it is the second most prevalent malignant bone tumor in this age group. The pelvis, femur, tibia, and ribs are frequent sites of origin.
The condition is caused by a genetic mutation, typically involving the EWSR1 gene, which drives uncontrolled cellular growth. Although it is not inherited, the mutation triggers rapid proliferation of abnormal cells, forming a tumor that invades healthy bone or tissue.
One of the notable systemic symptoms of this disease is fever, especially when the cancer has progressed or is accompanied by infection or necrotic tissue. Patients with fever by Ewing’s sarcoma often also present with bone pain, swelling, fatigue, and weight loss. The disease progresses quickly and has a high potential for metastasis, making early recognition and diagnosis essential.
Treatment generally includes chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and surgical excision, with success heavily dependent on early-stage diagnosis and a multidisciplinary approach.
The approach to managing fever depends on the root cause. Common treatments include:
- Antipyretics: Medications like acetaminophen and ibuprofen to lower body temperature and reduce discomfort.
- Hydration and rest: Essential for recovery and preventing complications.
- Antibiotics or antivirals: Used when the fever is caused by infection.
- Anti-inflammatory agents or corticosteroids: Applied in cases of autoimmune disease or malignancy.
When fever stems from fever by Ewing’s sarcoma, treatment focuses on managing the cancer. As the tumor responds to chemotherapy or radiation, systemic symptoms like fever often subside. Persistent fever may indicate treatment resistance or secondary infections, requiring prompt medical reassessment.
The Fever consultant service on the StrongBody AI platform is designed for individuals experiencing persistent, recurrent, or unexplained fever. It connects patients with medical professionals specialized in infectious diseases, oncology, and internal medicine who can conduct a comprehensive review and guide accurate diagnosis.
Core components of this service include:
- Full symptom history and physical evaluation.
- Review of blood tests (CBC, CRP, ESR), imaging (X-ray, CT, MRI), and prior medical reports.
- Differential diagnosis to determine whether the fever is infection-related, inflammatory, or a paraneoplastic symptom like fever by Ewing’s sarcoma.
The service is ideal for patients with low-grade or chronic fever not responsive to typical treatments. It enables timely assessment and specialist referrals, helping uncover serious hidden causes like malignancy.
A central task within the Fever consultant service is the diagnostic review of inflammatory markers and imaging. It includes:
- Evaluation of lab markers: Such as white blood cell count, ESR, CRP, and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), which may be elevated in cancer-related fever.
- Imaging correlation: Comparing symptoms with radiologic evidence to identify tumors, infections, or inflammation.
- Risk scoring: Using fever patterns and systemic signs to prioritize urgency and specialist referrals.
This process is especially critical when fever is the initial or sole sign of an underlying cancer like fever by Ewing’s sarcoma. It ensures a comprehensive and multidisciplinary approach, facilitating quicker intervention and reducing misdiagnosis.
In a touching autumn session at the Sarcoma Foundation of America conference in Boston in October 2025, a series of vulnerable patient videos about the exhausting, unexplained fevers driven by Ewing's sarcoma—often mistaken for common illnesses in young adults—brought the audience to tears, evoking the silent battle against an invisible fire within.
Among those stories was that of Riley Carter, 27 years old, a passionate craft brewer and pub owner from the lively city of Portland, Oregon—a woman whose innovative beers had delighted locals until relentless fevers from Ewing's sarcoma in her spine disrupted her life, diagnosed just over a year and a half ago.
From her early days experimenting in garage setups, Riley had poured her soul into brewing. While friends pursued stable jobs in tech, she founded a small brewpub in the Alberta Arts District, crafting seasonal ales inspired by Oregon's forests and rains, dreaming of expanding to bottle her signature hazy IPAs for wider distribution. But at 25, mysterious fevers emerged—recurring spikes with chills, sweats, and profound weakness, no clear infection in sight. Doctors initially blamed flu seasons or overwork in the brew kettle's heat. The fevers escalated, night sweats drenching sheets, turning brew days into foggy ordeals where flavors blurred and energy vanished. Scans at Oregon Health & Science University, confirmed by experts at Stanford, uncovered the culprit: Ewing's sarcoma along the spine, aggressive and releasing inflammatory signals fueling the systemic heat.
Her world chilled to isolation and fatigue. Pub events were scaled back; tasting collaborations postponed as she lay feverish; friendships cooled amid missed hikes in the Gorge. Riley spent over $130,000: consultations at leading West Coast centers and a consult in New York's Memorial Sloan Kettering, harsh chemotherapy cycles compounding neutropenic fevers, spinal surgery with stabilization rods, followed by targeted radiation. Persistent symptoms ruled—unpredictable fever waves, immunosuppression, deep exhaustion. She tried AI wellness apps: temperature trackers, virtual inflammation predictors, wearable cytokine monitors—all dispensing basic tips like "rest and hydrate," unable to forecast spikes or tie them to tumor-related inflammation.
One foggy November morning in 2025, after a fever surge shut down a sold-out brew release event, leaving tanks untapped and customers disappointed, Riley faced her breaking point. She refused to let sarcoma ferment despair, her drive to brew bold flavors and build community in Portland's craft scene stronger than ever. In an online Ewing's young adult group on Reddit that evening, another brewer from Denver shared her steadied path with StrongBody AI—a platform connecting patients worldwide to top oncologists and sarcoma specialists, using real-time data from sensors for personalized fever and systemic management. Worn but warmed by hope, Riley signed up.
Account creation was effortless. She tracked fever logs and daily brew notes, synced her advanced temperature and inflammatory marker wearable with smartwatch data, detailing her brewer's irregular hours in Portland's damp pubs, post-treatment chills from cool fermenters or stress from hop additions, fever triggers from long mashes or seasonal allergies, and her partner Alex's concern during her restless nights. The system swiftly matched her with Dr. Sofia Ramirez—a renowned sarcoma oncologist at Oregon Health & Science University, with 19 years specializing in Ewing's inflammatory effects in active creatives. Dr. Ramirez had pioneered AI-driven fever protocols, personalizing care around profession, Pacific Northwest dampness, and lifestyle rhythms.
Riley began with guarded doubt. "I've poured savings into treatments and tech that monitored but never mastered these fevers—how could remote support cool this constant burn?"
The first video consultation ignited change. Dr. Ramirez delved deeply: Riley's Portland brewpub with its steamy kettles contrasting rainy chills aggravating inflammation, sensory dulling from fevers affecting taste tests, frustration over untried recipes, Alex's careful monitoring during shifts. She analyzed sensor data meticulously, recalling her routines in every session. "For the first time, a doctor truly grasped a brewer's life with sarcoma—not just fevers, but helping me ferment without the heat spoiling my craft."
Challenges arose quickly from those closest. Her parents in rural Oregon insisted: "Honey, see doctors face-to-face at OHSU—not some online service!" Alex worried finances: "We've invested everything in the pub and bills already, Ri." Brewing peers dismissed: "Apps can't taste beer—stick to local oncologists." Riley wavered, nearly abandoning.
But app dashboards showing fever patterns easing—preemptive strategies averting highs, reclaimed energy for experimental batches through customized pacing aligned with Oregon's overcast moods—restored her belief. Dr. Ramirez explained: "Your fevers peak evenings from cytokine buildup linked to physical strain in humid mash rooms. We'll tailor anti-inflammatories to your brew cycles and integrate gentle yoga flows inspired by Willamette Valley vines." Riley felt deeply understood: care that bubbled with her passion.
Then, in late December 2025, a severe episode struck. Riley was overseeing a holiday stout boil in her bustling pub when a fierce fever wave crashed—temperature rocketing, chills shaking as vision hazed amid the aromatic steam. Panic rising with staff looking on, her sensor detected urgent cytokine surge, alerting StrongBody AI immediately. In under 30 seconds, Dr. Ramirez connected via earpiece.
She guided calmly: "Riley, step to the cool room—data shows inflammatory flare, not infection. Take the prepared dose; sip chilled electrolyte, breathe slow like checking fermentation gravity. Alex is notified with your location." Fever crested and fell enough to delegate; tests confirmed a controlled response, no progression.
That night, toasting a quiet pint with Alex as Portland's lights twinkled through mist, Riley wept—not weakness, but profound relief at expert guidance quenching the blaze.
Thereafter, she trusted Dr. Ramirez wholly through StrongBody AI. She refined brews with predictive calm, wove restorative forest walks into foggy days, monitored with flavor and freedom. The fevers remained but tempered, integrated—no longer souring her spirit.
Now, in her vibrant Alberta District pub filled with hop scents, Riley pours innovative ales with steady joy, gathering locals in laughter and shared stories. Alex smiles: "You're my master brewer—turning fevers' scorch into beer's perfect warmth."
Riley knows the fermentation continues. But after years consumed by unexplained flames, bold hope effervesces within—hope to brew brighter, connect richer, savor the life that intoxicates her soul.
And Riley's story with StrongBody AI is still unfolding…
In a solemn spring afternoon at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting in San Francisco in April 2025, a collection of vulnerable patient videos about the relentless, unexplained fevers that plague many with Ewing's sarcoma—often misdiagnosed as infections or fatigue—reduced the large audience to tears, a poignant reminder of the disease's insidious systemic toll.
Among those stories was that of Ethan Brooks, 26 years old, a dedicated barista and aspiring coffee roaster from the foggy neighborhoods of Seattle, Washington—a young man whose passion for crafting perfect pours had been consumed by recurring fevers from Ewing's sarcoma in his rib cage, diagnosed nearly two years prior.
From his early days at independent cafes in Capitol Hill, Ethan had lived for the rhythm of espresso machines. While friends climbed corporate ladders, he perfected latte art and sourced beans from small farms, dreaming of opening his own roastery showcasing Pacific Northwest blends with global flavors. But at 24, persistent fevers struck—low-grade at first, spiking unpredictably with chills and sweats, draining his energy and forcing shifts to end early. Doctors initially prescribed antibiotics for suspected infections or advised rest for "burnout." The fevers intensified, night sweats soaking sheets, turning busy morning rushes into hazy struggles. Scans at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, confirmed by specialists at Mayo Clinic, uncovered the source: Ewing's sarcoma in the ribs, aggressive and triggering inflammatory cytokines driving the fever cycles.
His world blurred to weakness and withdrawal. Cafe hours were cut; roasting workshops canceled as he shivered in bed; social pours with friends faded amid canceled hangouts in Seattle's rainy evenings. Ethan exhausted over $110,000: consultations at top US centers and a trial in Houston's MD Anderson, grueling chemotherapy regimens that worsened neutropenic fevers, thoracic surgery resecting tumor and reconstructing ribs, followed by radiation. Lingering symptoms dominated—intermittent high fevers, immunosuppression, overwhelming fatigue. He tried AI wellness tools: temperature-tracking apps, virtual fever analyzers, wearable inflammation monitors—all suggesting "stay hydrated" or "avoid crowds," unable to anticipate spikes or connect them to underlying activity.
One drizzly March morning in 2025, after a fever peak forced him to close his cafe shift early, disappointing regulars waiting for his signature cortados, Ethan faced his vulnerability. He refused to let sarcoma extinguish his craft, his vision of hosting community cuppings where coffee connected people in Seattle's coffee-obsessed culture. In an online Ewing's young adult forum on Reddit that afternoon, another barista from Portland shared his managed recovery through StrongBody AI—a platform connecting patients globally to elite oncologists and sarcoma specialists, leveraging real-time data from sensors for personalized inflammation and fever control. Fatigued but fueled by the account, Ethan signed up.
Account creation was straightforward. He recorded fever episodes and daily energy journals, synced his continuous temperature and cytokine marker wearable with smartwatch data, describing his barista shifts in Seattle's damp cafes, post-treatment vulnerability to cold drafts behind counters, fever triggers from long stands or caffeine exposure irony, and his girlfriend Nora's worry during his fever-delirious nights. The platform quickly matched him with Dr. Elena Vasquez—a prominent sarcoma oncologist at University of Washington Medicine, with 18 years specializing in Ewing's systemic effects in active young adults. Dr. Vasquez had led AI-enhanced fever and inflammation protocols, personalizing care around profession, Pacific Northwest climate, and lifestyle stressors.
Ethan was deeply doubtful at first. "I've drained savings on treatments and apps that logged temps but never truly helped—how could remote monitoring quench these internal fires?"
The debut video consultation eased his concerns profoundly. Dr. Vasquez explored thoroughly: Ethan's Seattle cafe with its steamy machines contrasting outdoor chill spiking inflammation, creative slumps from fever fog affecting roast experiments, guilt over short-staffed shifts, Nora's careful broth-making during episodes. She dissected sensor patterns carefully, referencing his routines in every session. "For the first time, a doctor really understood a barista's world with sarcoma—not just fevers, but helping me pour without the heat overwhelming me."
Doubts from loved ones surfaced fast. His parents in Tacoma insisted: "Son, see specialists in person at Hutch—not some online platform!" Nora expressed financial strain: "We've borrowed so much already, Ethan." Cafe colleagues scoffed: "Apps can't brew like real docs—push through the fever like a double shift." Ethan teetered, almost deleting the app.
But reviewing app graphs of fever intervals lengthening—proactive tweaks preventing severe spikes, restored stamina for morning pulls through tailored hydration aligned with Seattle's overcast days—rebuilt his faith. Dr. Vasquez clarified: "Your fevers crest afternoons from cytokine buildup tied to standing and subtle dehydration in heated cafes. We'll customize anti-inflammatories to your shift peaks and integrate gentle breathing pauses mimicking steam wand control." Ethan felt genuinely accompanied: guidance that steamed with his daily grind.
Then, in late April 2025, a dangerous escalation occurred. Ethan was hosting a busy weekend rush in his cafe when a sudden fever wave hit—temperature soaring, chills rattling cups as vision swam. Alarm building amid concerned customers, his sensor flagged critical inflammatory surge, alerting StrongBody AI urgently. In under 30 seconds, Dr. Vasquez connected via earpiece.
She directed serenely: "Ethan, step to the back—data shows cytokine flare, not infection. Take the prepared antipyretic; sip electrolyte slowly, breathe steady like tamping a perfect shot. Nora is notified with your location." Fever subsided enough to hand off the bar; tests confirmed a contained episode, no progression.
That evening, sharing a quiet pour-over with Nora as Seattle's rain pattered on windows, Ethan wept—not exhaustion, but profound thanks for timely expertise cutting through the fog.
Thereafter, he embraced Dr. Vasquez completely through StrongBody AI. He fine-tuned shifts with predictive insights, wove restorative walks in Discovery Park for clarity, monitored with aroma and assurance. The fevers persisted but gentled, harnessed—no longer steaming away his passion.
Now, in his cozy Capitol Hill cafe scented with fresh roasts, Ethan crafts drinks with steady hands and warm smiles, drawing community together one cup at a time. Nora beams: "You're my master roaster—turning fevers' burn into coffee's comforting warmth."
Ethan knows the brew continues. But after years scorched by unexplained heat, rich hope percolates within—hope to create bolder, connect deeper, savor the blends that awaken his soul.
And Ethan's story with StrongBody AI is still unfolding…
In a poignant winter evening at the European Oncology Congress in Berlin in December 2025, a series of heartfelt patient videos about the persistent, unexplained fevers that often accompany Ewing's sarcoma—frequently dismissed as infections or flu—left the audience of specialists and survivors in tearful empathy, underscoring the disease's subtle yet relentless warnings.
Among those stories was that of Mia Andersson, 24 years old, a vibrant graphic novelist and illustrator from the creative hub of Stockholm, Sweden—a young woman whose imaginative worlds on paper had been overshadowed by recurring, debilitating fevers from Ewing's sarcoma in her pelvic bone, diagnosed just over a year earlier.
From her student days at Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts and Design, Mia had thrived in solitude and color. While peers partied through Stockholm's long summer nights, she sketched intricate fantasy comics in her Södermalm studio, dreaming of publishing her graphic novel series about Nordic myths reimagined in modern Scandinavia. But at 23, waves of unexplained fever began—chills and high temperatures spiking without clear infection, leaving her bedridden for days, sapping her energy and blurring her creative vision. Doctors initially treated it as viral or stress-related. The fevers persisted, accompanied by night sweats and fatigue, turning drawing sessions into battles against shaking hands and foggy mind. Scans at Karolinska University Hospital, confirmed by experts in Copenhagen and London, revealed the hidden cause: Ewing's sarcoma in the ilium, aggressive and fueling systemic inflammation through cytokine release.
Her life faded to exhaustion and isolation. Book deadlines were missed; art fairs in Stockholm skipped as she shivered under blankets; friendships waned amid canceled coffee meetups in Gamla Stan. Mia poured over €70,000: consultations at top Scandinavian centers and a trip to Germany's Charité Hospital, intensive chemotherapy cycles that amplified her fevers with neutropenic episodes, complex pelvic surgery with reconstruction, followed by radiation. Side effects overwhelmed—persistent low-grade fevers, immunosuppression, profound weakness. She tried AI health trackers: fever-logging apps, virtual symptom analyzers, wearable temperature monitors—all offering generic advice like "hydrate" or "rest," failing to predict spikes or link them to tumor activity.
One frigid January afternoon in 2025, after a fever surge forced her to abandon a crucial illustration for her upcoming graphic novel launch, leaving pages unfinished and dreams deferred, Mia confronted her fragility. She refused to let sarcoma dim her artistic fire, her desire to inspire young readers with stories of resilient heroines in Sweden's archipelagos. In a Swedish young adult cancer support group online that night, another illustrator from Malmö shared her stabilized journey with StrongBody AI—a platform connecting patients worldwide to premier oncologists and sarcoma specialists, using real-time data from sensors for personalized fever and inflammation management. Drained but drawn to the possibility, Mia created an account.
The process was intuitive. She logged fever patterns and daily vitality notes, connected her continuous temperature and inflammatory marker wearable with smartwatch data, detailing her illustrator's erratic schedule in Stockholm's dark winters, post-treatment sensitivity to cold drafts in her studio, fever triggers from deadline stress or overwork, and her boyfriend Leo's concern during her feverish nights. The system promptly matched her with Dr. Karl Eriksson—a distinguished sarcoma oncologist at Uppsala University Hospital, with 17 years specializing in Ewing's systemic symptoms in creative young adults. Dr. Eriksson had pioneered AI-integrated fever monitoring protocols, tailoring plans around profession, seasonal Nordic factors, and emotional triggers.
Mia approached with heavy skepticism. "I've wasted hope on clinics and apps that tracked numbers but ignored my fight—how could remote care tame these endless fevers?"
The first video consultation dispelled her fears. Dr. Eriksson delved intimately: Mia's Stockholm studio with its poor heating spiking inflammation in winter, creative blocks from fever-induced fog, guilt over delayed novel pages, Leo's midnight temperature checks. He examined sensor data meticulously, recalling her unique cycles in follow-ups. "For the first time, a doctor truly understood an artist's life with sarcoma—not just fevers, but helping me draw without the fire consuming me."
Resistance emerged immediately. Her parents in rural Dalarna warned: "Darling, see doctors in person at Karolinska—not some Uppsala platform!" Leo fretted costs: "We've borrowed so much already, Mia." Artist friends dismissed: "Trust Swedish hospitals—apps can't feel your fever like a real exam." Mia nearly quit.
But app charts showing fever trends moderating—anticipatory interventions preventing peaks, renewed energy for sketching through customized rest rhythms aligned with light therapy for Swedish winters—rekindled her trust. Dr. Eriksson explained: "Your fevers escalate evenings from cytokine flares tied to creative stress and Stockholm's short days. We'll personalize anti-inflammatories to your drawing sessions and incorporate mindfulness sketches for emotional regulation." Mia felt profoundly heard: support that illustrated her world.
Then, in late February 2025, a severe crisis hit. Mia was deep in an all-night inking session for her novel deadline when a sudden high fever erupted—chills wracking her body, vision blurring as temperature soared dangerously. Panic mounting alone in her studio, her sensor detected critical inflammatory surge, alerting StrongBody AI instantly. In under 30 seconds, Dr. Eriksson connected via video.
He guided calmly: "Mia, pause your work—data shows cytokine storm, not infection. Take the prepared antipyretic; hydrate slowly, breathe through it like shading a difficult panel. Leo is notified with your location." Fever broke enough to stabilize; tests confirmed a managed flare, no progression.
That night, curled with Leo as Stockholm's snow hushed the streets, Mia wept—not despair, but deep gratitude for expert rescue bridging the cold.
Thereafter, she trusted Dr. Eriksson fully through StrongBody AI. She balanced creation with predictive breaks, wove winter walks along frozen Djurgården for vitality, monitored with inspiration and calm. The fevers lingered but softened, channeled—no longer erasing her lines.
Now, in her sunlit Södermalm studio, Mia illustrates with vivid passion, her graphic novels captivating readers with tales of enduring light. Leo whispers: "You're my fearless storyteller—turning fevers' flames into art's eternal glow."
Mia knows the narrative evolves. But after years scorched by unexplained heat, luminous hope sketches within—hope to create freer, dream larger, embrace the colors that define her.
And Mia's story with StrongBody AI is still unfolding…
How to Book a Fever Consultant Service on StrongBody AI
StrongBody AI simplifies the healthcare journey by providing instant access to specialized services like the Fever consultant service. Here’s how to book:
Step 1: Register on StrongBody
- Visit StrongBody AI.
- Click “Sign Up” and complete the form with your name, email, country, occupation, and password.
- Activate your account through the email verification link.
Step 2: Search for Services
- Use the search bar to find “Fever consultant service”.
- Apply filters based on expertise (infectious disease, oncology), language, availability, and budget.
Step 3: Review Expert Profiles
- View experience, credentials, and reviews.
- Select specialists with experience managing fever by Ewing's sarcoma or chronic unexplained fever.
Step 4: Schedule and Pay
- Choose a time slot that works for you.
- Click “Book Now” and complete the secure payment process.
Step 5: Attend the Consultation
- Log into your StrongBody account at the scheduled time.
- Discuss your symptoms, share medical records, and receive a customized evaluation and action plan.
The platform ensures secure communication, data protection, and access to global experts without travel or delay.
Fever may appear harmless, but when persistent or unexplained, it becomes a critical health indicator. In serious cases like fever by Ewing's sarcoma, it may be the first signal of a growing malignancy. Patients should not ignore recurring fever, especially if accompanied by bone pain or fatigue.
The Fever consultant service provides professional guidance, rapid diagnostics, and access to global expertise. It plays a vital role in distinguishing between benign conditions and more serious causes like cancer, helping patients seek timely and effective care.
StrongBody AI offers a safe, efficient, and globally accessible solution for anyone experiencing unexplained fever. Booking the Fever consultant service on this platform ensures accurate diagnosis, peace of mind, and a proactive path toward health recovery—no matter where the patient is located.
Overview of StrongBody AI
StrongBody AI is a platform connecting services and products in the fields of health, proactive health care, and mental health, operating at the official and sole address: https://strongbody.ai. The platform connects real doctors, real pharmacists, and real proactive health care experts (sellers) with users (buyers) worldwide, allowing sellers to provide remote/on-site consultations, online training, sell related products, post blogs to build credibility, and proactively contact potential customers via Active Message. Buyers can send requests, place orders, receive offers, and build personal care teams. The platform automatically matches based on expertise, supports payments via Stripe/Paypal (over 200 countries). With tens of millions of users from the US, UK, EU, Canada, and others, the platform generates thousands of daily requests, helping sellers reach high-income customers and buyers easily find suitable real experts. StrongBody AI is where sellers receive requests from buyers, proactively send offers, conduct direct transactions via chat, offer acceptance, and payment. This pioneering feature provides initiative and maximum convenience for both sides, suitable for real-world health care transactions – something no other platform offers.
StrongBody AI is a human connection platform, enabling users to connect with real, verified healthcare professionals who hold valid qualifications and proven professional experience from countries around the world.
All consultations and information exchanges take place directly between users and real human experts, via B-Messenger chat or third-party communication tools such as Telegram, Zoom, or phone calls.
StrongBody AI only facilitates connections, payment processing, and comparison tools; it does not interfere in consultation content, professional judgment, medical decisions, or service delivery. All healthcare-related discussions and decisions are made exclusively between users and real licensed professionals.
StrongBody AI serves tens of millions of members from the US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, Vietnam, Brazil, India, and many other countries (including extended networks such as Ghana and Kenya). Tens of thousands of new users register daily in buyer and seller roles, forming a global network of real service providers and real users.
The platform integrates Stripe and PayPal, supporting more than 50 currencies. StrongBody AI does not store card information; all payment data is securely handled by Stripe or PayPal with OTP verification. Sellers can withdraw funds (except currency conversion fees) within 30 minutes to their real bank accounts. Platform fees are 20% for sellers and 10% for buyers (clearly displayed in service pricing).
StrongBody AI acts solely as an intermediary connection platform and does not participate in or take responsibility for consultation content, service or product quality, medical decisions, or agreements made between buyers and sellers.
All consultations, guidance, and healthcare-related decisions are carried out exclusively between buyers and real human professionals. StrongBody AI is not a medical provider and does not guarantee treatment outcomes.
For sellers:
Access high-income global customers (US, EU, etc.), increase income without marketing or technical expertise, build a personal brand, monetize spare time, and contribute professional value to global community health as real experts serving real users.
For buyers:
Access a wide selection of reputable real professionals at reasonable costs, avoid long waiting times, easily find suitable experts, benefit from secure payments, and overcome language barriers.
The term “AI” in StrongBody AI refers to the use of artificial intelligence technologies for platform optimization purposes only, including user matching, service recommendations, content support, language translation, and workflow automation.
StrongBody AI does not use artificial intelligence to provide medical diagnosis, medical advice, treatment decisions, or clinical judgment.
Artificial intelligence on the platform does not replace licensed healthcare professionals and does not participate in medical decision-making.
All healthcare-related consultations and decisions are made solely by real human professionals and users.