housejob.ng

Clinical answers, grounded in evidence.

Built for Nigerian clinicians. Powered by local and international guidelines.

How it works

From question to answer in seconds

Designed for the ward. No searching, no scrolling through PDFs — just ask and get a cited, guideline-based answer.

1

Ask a clinical question

Type or speak your question — anything from drug dosing to emergency management protocols.

2

Get a cited answer

Housejob searches the guidelines and returns a structured answer with source citations you can verify.

3

Apply it with confidence

Every answer is traceable to the source — so you can act confidently at the bedside, even at 3am.

Grounded in authoritative sources

Built on guidelines you already trust

Every answer is drawn from authoritative clinical sources — Nigerian, regional, and global.

Nigerian Standard Treatment Guidelines (NSTG 2023)

The official clinical reference of the Federal Ministry of Health. Housejob draws first-line management algorithms from the most current edition.

Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) Protocols

National protocols for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, reproductive health, and nutrition — adapted for Nigerian facilities and drug availability.

World Health Organization (WHO) Guidelines

International evidence-based clinical recommendations from WHO, used to supplement and cross-reference local guidelines where applicable.

Cochrane Systematic Reviews

High-quality, peer-reviewed systematic reviews providing the strongest available evidence base for clinical decisions.

Why Housejob

Built for the Nigerian ward

Not a generic AI. A clinical tool built around the realities of Nigerian healthcare — drug availability, local disease burden, and ward realities.

Locally grounded

Answers reflect drugs available in Nigeria, local disease patterns, and NSTG protocols — not generic international guidance that doesn't translate to your ward.

Always cited

Every answer includes its source — so you can verify the recommendation, quote the guideline on ward rounds, or defend your clinical decision.

Built for speed

Designed for the ward, not a library. Get a structured answer in seconds — not minutes of scrolling through a 400-page PDF.

Voice input

Ask hands-free during a procedure, ward round, or casualty rush. Housejob listens and responds — no typing required.

Who it's for

For every Nigerian clinician, at every level

House Officers

First-call answers for the night shift — when you can't always reach the reg and the patient needs a decision now.

Medical Officers

Guideline-based support for general practice, district hospital medicine, and primary care settings across Nigeria.

Registrars

Quick reference for ward rounds, pre-op assessment, and cases where you need to cite the guideline before the consultant asks.

Nurses & Midwives

Evidence-based answers for drug queries, observations, and maternal care in facilities where a doctor isn't always immediately available.

See it in action

Answers that show their work

Ask any clinical question and get a structured, cited response — grounded in the guidelines you trust.

First-line treatment for uncomplicated malaria in an adult?

The first-line treatment for uncomplicated malaria in Nigeria is Artemether-Lumefantrine (AL), commonly known as Coartem®. The standard adult dose (≥35 kg) is 4 tablets twice daily for 3 days (at 0, 8, 24, 36, 48, and 60 hours), taken with food or a fatty meal to improve absorption.

For patients unable to tolerate AL, Artesunate-Amodiaquine (ASAQ) is an acceptable alternative. IV Artesunate should be initiated for severe malaria or where the patient cannot take oral medication...

NSTG 2023FMOH Malaria GuidelinesWHO 2023

NSTG 2023

Nigeria's official treatment guidelines, fully indexed

4+ sources

NSTG · FMOH · WHO · Cochrane

24 / 7

Available — even on night call

Free

For verified Nigerian clinicians

From Nigerian clinicians

What doctors are saying

“On my first night call, I had three complicated presentations at once. Housejob gave me a cited answer in seconds — I didn't have to guess.”

Dr. A.O.

House Officer, LUTH

“I use it every morning before ward rounds to quickly review management plans. It's like having the NSTG in your pocket — but faster.”

Dr. F.N.

Medical Officer, UCH Ibadan

“The obstetrics section is spot on. It's the first tool I've seen that actually reflects what we deal with in Nigerian hospitals.”

Dr. C.A.

Registrar, AKTH

Your clinical reference. In your pocket.

Free for Nigerian clinicians. Grounded in guidelines you already trust.