Robots are becoming institutional actors
They operate across departments, interact with patients, and make real-time decisions. The operational footprint of an autonomous robot is institutional — not confined to a single workflow.
Autonomous robots are entering hospitals faster than institutions can govern them.
We build the infrastructure that defines what they are allowed to do.
The Problem
They operate across departments, interact with patients, and make real-time decisions. The operational footprint of an autonomous robot is institutional — not confined to a single workflow.
What a robot is allowed to do is unclear, implicit, and inconsistent. Authorization lives in configurations, tribal knowledge, and deployment defaults — not in a managed institutional policy.
When something goes wrong, there is no structured record of the authorization decisions made. Investigations are incomplete before they begin. Regulators and insurers have no document to examine.
What We Build
Vareli sits between your hospital and its autonomous systems — authorizing actions, enforcing policy, and maintaining a complete operational record.
How We Think
Nothing executes without explicit approval.
We are a foundational layer, not a workflow tool.
Every action produces a structured, queryable record.
We govern all robots, not just one platform.
Why Now
Hospitals are already deploying robots.
Governance is not keeping pace.
The institutions that build this layer early will define how autonomy is safely adopted. The ones that wait will inherit the problem at scale.
Tell us about your fleet, your governance posture, and what you are trying to solve. We will follow up within one business day.