When we launched Juta, we built it for families with aging parents. The problem was universal enough: one adult child handling most of the check-ins, the rest of the family waiting for updates, a loved one who did not need monitoring but whose family needed to stop worrying every day.

The Juta editorial team writes about aging, caregiving, senior wellness, and the families who show up every day.

What we kept hearing

Veterans communicate differently. They are less likely to volunteer how they are really doing. They are skeptical of anything that feels like surveillance or clinical assessment. The format that works for them is lower pressure, more specific, and more respectful of their independence than a generic wellness check-in.

First responder families carry a particular kind of worry that does not go away with retirement. The trained vigilance of years of shift work and dangerous jobs leaves a mark on the whole family system, not just the service member. They need information more than most families do, and they need it delivered in a way that does not feel clinical.

What we built

service.getjuta.com is the same core product built specifically for these families. The messaging is calibrated to the communication style that works for veterans and first responders. The framing respects their identity rather than positioning them as someone who needs to be checked on. The result is a check-in that gets responded to and a recap that gives families what they need.

"The families who served deserve something built for them, not something adapted for them."

If your family includes a veteran or a retired first responder, service.getjuta.com was built for you.

Learn more about Juta for veteran and first responder families →