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r/dadditu/Quegqueg2 months agoPosts

How do you keep track of your kid's medical history?

85% match
We have a 7-month-old, and my wife has asked me to figure out a better way to keep track of everything health-related. Pediatrician visit notes are in one portal that we never log into, specialist visits are in another, and I've got random notes in my phone (as does my wife) from things we didn't want to forget. We also might move across town later this year & switch doctors, which seems like it will just make all of this more complicated. How are other parents handling this - is there an app we just haven't heard of? Shared notes? A spreadsheet? Pen & paper? Just...accepting the chaos?
how to keep track of my medical history
r/Anemicu/growlownhigh8 months agoPosts

Please help me make sense of my blood results

85% match
Hello I’m a 37-year-old male, normally very active. I train about three times a week, hike, garden, and stay busy with all kinds of physical work. Over the past year, though, I’ve been dealing with increasing fatigue. It’s gotten to the point where I’ve started skipping workouts because I just don’t have the energy. My joints ache, my muscles recover slowly, and most days feel like I’ve done a heavy leg session even when I haven’t. I get out of breath quickly, and even my skin looks worse than usual. I’ve noticed I’m getting blisters from simple things like using garden tools, which never used to happen. At first I shrugged it off as just getting older, but things have declined pretty fast. My diet is solid and should easily cover my iron needs. I’ve also had GI issues for about two years, with the last year being the worst — lots of loose stools and gas. Based on my bloodwork, I’m worried this could point toward IBD, but I know a colonoscopy is needed for a real diagnosis. I’m trying to make sense of these results so I can figure out how to move forward and start addressing whatever’s going on.
how to make sense of blood test results
r/selfhostedu/ozone65872 months agoPosts

Self-hosted app to store health records?

82% match
Starting to get more serious about my health. I need something that helps me track vaccines, surgeries, blood work, etc. Optionally: it would be nice if it supported some way to feed the data to an LLM like an MCP server or something. But this is not a requirement at all. Edit: I already use paperless-ngx for documents in general. But The way these document managers work is via OCR, tags and AI and search. I'm looking for something that is timeline-based. For health information you want to know when your last surgery was and why, allergies, blood type, medications you have taken in the past and how you handled them, etc. Basically, there is a lot of text info that a document manager wouldn't be good for. Maybe I can see a timeline where I can see the last time I went to the doctor, went to the dentist and all that. Imagine Immich but the timeline are your health-records and other info.
app to store health records
r/digitalnomadu/Ffinnis3 months agoPosts

How do you keep track of your medical history as a digital nomad?

82% match
How do you keep track of your medical history as a digital nomad? I’m planning to spend more time abroad and one thing I’m worried about is healthcare continuity. At home my medical history is at least somewhat understandable. I know which doctors I saw, where I did my tests, what I was prescribed, and where the records are. But if I start moving between countries, I’m afraid it will all end up scattered across emails, PDFs, clinic portals, screenshots, and memory. For people who have actually dealt with doctors, dentists, labs, prescriptions, vaccines, or checkups abroad. How do you manage this? Do you keep your own folder/system, or do you just figure it out when something happens? Any stories, mistakes, or practical tips would be appreciated
how to keep track of my medical history
r/expatsu/Ffinnis3 months agoPosts

How do you keep track of your medical history while living abroad?

68% match
I’m planning to spend more time abroad, and one thing I’m worried about is healthcare continuity. At home, my medical history is at least somewhat understandable. I know which doctors I saw, where I did my tests, what I was prescribed, and where the records are. But once you move abroad, or split time between countries, it feels like everything can quickly end up scattered across emails, PDFs, clinic portals, screenshots, insurance apps, and memory. For people who have dealt with doctors, dentists, labs, prescriptions, vaccines, or checkups outside their home country: how do you manage this? Do you keep your own folder/system, ask clinics to transfer records, rely on your insurance portal, or just figure it out when something happens? Any stories, mistakes, or practical tips would be appreciated.
how to keep track of my medical history
r/diabetes_t2u/also_your_mom7 months agoPosts

I am still trying to make sense of "A1C" vs "blood sugar" and what the results mean

62% match
Every time I try to focus in on my blood sugar level (fasting) in order to determine "diabetic" vs "prediabetic" I run into a wall of disconnected information. I am finding consistent information tha
how to make sense of blood test results
r/selfhostedu/Academic-Talk417024 days agoPosts

Health records app

60% match
I need a self hosted tool that can keep my and my family’s health records and show us graphs for it such as iron levels, heamoglobin levels etc… and easy to navigate the history. I usually get a pdf
health record app recommendation
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