How MyMedicals Works
A simple walkthrough of the app experience, from signing up to sharing files with your doctor, built with a privacy and offline-first mindset.
Account setup
Create a profile to enter the MyMedicals ecosystem.
Create your MyMedicals account in seconds. Sign up with your email address or mobile number, or continue with Apple or Google for a faster, secure sign in.
After signing in, you’ll complete a basic profile. These details help keep your medical records accurate, personalize medication reminders, and helps us share your data accurately with doctors and family members.
Required fields must be completed before you can enter the app. Optional fields can be added anytime.
- Required: Name, date of birth, blood group, phone number, and email.
- Optional: Address, height, weight, and a profile photo.
Why do we ask for these details
We collect only what we need to provide the service. Your phone number or email is used for sign in, account recovery. Profile details like your name and date of birth help organize records, reduce medication and document mix-ups when shared with doctors and family members. Optional details (address, height, weight, and a profile photo) are used only for personalization, and you can update or remove them anytime.
Profile setup
Required and optional fields
This is what we ask for to create your profile and unlock the app.
Required
needed to enterName
Date of birth
Blood group
Phone number
Optional
add anytimeMedications
Add medications with the details needed for reliable reminders and clear sharing.
Add a medication by scanning a prescription or entering the details manually. Scanning can fill the form faster, but nothing is saved until you confirm each field.
Every field in this step is required because it drives your reminder schedule and the adherence history you may share with family or your doctor.
- Scan: Extract fields from a prescription and check them before saving.
- Manual: Enter the same fields if you do not want to scan.
- Schedule: You choose the time that matches your day.
Why we ask you to review
Prescriptions vary in handwriting and formatting, and OCR can misread a dose or a frequency. A quick review keeps reminders accurate, prevents mix ups in your medication list, and makes shared information clearer for family and doctors.
Medication details
Fields we ask for
All fields are required so reminders and history stay consistent.
Adherence
Gentle reminders, quick check ins, and a history you can share when it helps.
MyMedicals turns your medication list into a simple daily schedule. When a reminder fires, you can mark the dose as taken, due, or overdue in seconds.
Your adherence history stays easy to review and useful for follow ups. If you want support, invite a family member or caregiver to see check ins without handing over your entire health library.
- One tap logging: Taken, due, or overdue. No extra steps.
- Clear patterns: Spot streaks and late doses without digging through notes.
- Optional support: Add family to help you stay consistent, on your terms.
Why this matters
Adherence is often the difference between a medication helping and a medication feeling ineffective. A lightweight record makes it easier to notice what changed (timing, meals, late doses) and gives your doctor better context without turning your health into a spreadsheet.
Today
Reminder check in
Schedule
Pantacid 40 mg
Before meal • 8:00 AM
Vitamin D tablet
After meal • 2:00 PM
Family Sharing
Optional to share • Revoke anytimeShare
Show QR
Share link
Get Access
Scan QR
Open link
Doctor share
Share what’s relevant for this visit through a secure, time limited session.
From the Files screen, select only the folders and documents your doctor needs for this appointment. When you tap Share, we generate a one time QR code and an 8 character code for this visit so your doctor can access your data in seconds.
Medication adherence is shared by default to add real world context. During the visit, your doctor can add new files, notes, and medications for today without altering your existing history. New medications are scheduled automatically so you don’t have to set them up next time.
By default, your documents stay on your device. Nothing is transmitted until you start sharing, and the session ends the moment you revoke it. Keeping sharing scoped and time limited helps protect your privacy while still making doctor visits fast and practical.
Why this matters
Doctor visits are time boxed and agenda driven. This flow avoids permanent portals and broad uploads by keeping sharing scoped, temporary, and initiated only by you, which helps maximize privacy and keeps your data secure.
Doctor sharing
Choose what to share
Select the files you want reviewed for this visit.
Selection
Prescriptions
Lab reports
Medication adherence (shared by default)
Share via;
Time limited and revocable in one tap.
Privacy
Offline-first by default, minimal data collection, and no analytics events.
MyMedicals is built for healthcare realities: patchy internet, shared devices, and sensitive information. Core features work without relying on a web dashboard.
We collect only what is needed to run the service (like login and reminders). There are no payments, no ads, and no marketing analytics.
- Offline-first: Prescriptions and images stay on device by default.
- Minimal by design: Optional fields remain optional.
- Delete anytime: You can remove your account and data from settings.
What we collect (and what we don’t)
We use your email or phone for sign in and recovery, and device basics for reminders and security. We do not collect payment info, insurance, or analytics events for marketing.
Privacy-first
Clear safeguards
Designed to minimize risk while keeping the experience simple.
Default behavior
Offline-first by default
Core experience does not rely on a web app.
Sync when you share
Files can sync during doctor sharing sessions.
No analytics events
We do not track you for marketing.
That is the product flow
Know more about our safeguarding policies and protocols in Privacy and Security Section.
MyMedicals does not provide medical advice. For diagnosis or treatment, consult a licensed medical professional.