MedActionPlan News

Kid Needs a Kidney

by DBrooten 14. February 2012 23:14

This is a great story for Valentine’s Day about a child who recently received a kidney transplant. 

“Babygirl is on three anti-rejection meds (eighteen pills per day), one antiviral (two pills), one antibiotic (one pill), and one antifungal (swish and swallow four times daily). She is on one medication for high blood pressure (one pill), one antacid (one pill), and her usual asthma meds (one pill and an inhaler). The majority of this is on a twice daily schedule, but it MUST be done every 12 hours without fail, for the rest of her life. We have already signed up at MyMedSchedule.com. They keep track of your medications, remind you to call for refills, and send us four text messages daily to remind us to remind Babygirl to take her meds. It's free,and anyone can use this service. Hubby and I are thinking about using it for our own meds!”

Read the whole post here.

MyMedSchedule Impresses a Patient’s Family and Physician

by DBrooten 7. February 2012 14:56

We recently received this great anecdote about a patient from a Care Transitions Intervention Coach in Massachusetts:

”The son/primary caregiver of his father, who has moderate/late stage Dementia of Alzheimer’s Type, reported the reaction he got from the Primary Care Physician (PCP) when he shared the MyMedSchedule list of medicines and times and quantities. The son brought his printed copy of his dad’s med list to the outpatient appointment, and the PCP was impressed and very positive.

“The son had shared, on a earlier contact, that he found the website easy to navigate and he was thankful for my bringing this new resource to his attention. With the son’s need for respite, he could see the added benefit of the visual list for when his sister and other private help come to relieve him of caregiver duties.

“He is also setting up a med list for his mother who has early stage dementia; and he appreciates the efficiencies built into the website. ”

MyMedSchedule Mobile Review

by DBrooten 7. February 2012 14:45

Our thanks to Dennis Moffitt of Lake Oswego, Oregon for his rave review of the MyMedSchedule Mobile iPhone app:

“I am a CPA and use MyMedSchedule for managing my intake of 10 different meds several times per day. At a support group through Oregon Health Sciences University (OHSU) I was referred to MyMedSchedule as well as the mobile version. The app was described as a resource for managing doses, reminders and descriptions of (and photo to ID) each pill that I take.

“It has been working great! I have used it daily. I've had my iPhone with me at appointments and when asked about any med or allergies to meds, I simply pull this app and show them all they need to know.

“In my situation, doctors and nurses rotate within a team. Each wants to review what I'm taking. In seconds they have it all. The app has twice uncovered the need to confirm a med with my Pharmacist. This information is also loaded on the app, as is all of my insurance coverage, plan info, and phone contact numbers.

“I happened to call MedSchedule on a programming matter to see if I could add more. Wow! Not only were they very receptive to new ideas, they called me back the same day of my initial call. This is a quality product that should be available and offered anytime anyone buys med insurance and certainly doctors, dentists, pharmacies, and nurses should be made more aware of it.

“If you use MyMedSchedule you'll really like it and you too can improve the overall correctness of medical information being used on you and others.”

With MyMedSchedule Mobile users can create, update, or view their schedules, and set or receive medication reminders. And any changes you make on MyMedSchedule Mobile are available the next time you log in to MyMedSchedule.com on your computer. MyMedSchedule Mobile is free for iPhone and Android.

Medications help the heart - if you take them

by DBrooten 6. February 2012 13:40

An article in the Harvard Health Letter looks at the barriers that sometimes cause patients not to take their medications as directed, and discusses some potential solutions—including MyMedSchedule:

Using a daily pill organizer is a tried-and-true way to keep track of which medication to take and when. Also, some drugs now come in blister packs with calendars printed on them to help people remember.

Websites such as mymedschedule.com can help you custom-tailor and print medication schedules from your computer. You can also set up email or text-message reminders there. There are also downloadable smartphone apps you can program to buzz or bing you when it's time to take your medication.

Read the article here

Do You Care for a Parent Who Lives Far Away?

by DBrooten 3. February 2012 13:07

Kathleen Cleary takes a look at tools that help folks keep track of their parents' health from long distance. For checking on their medications, she recommends:

“[MyMedSchedule] provides reminders to take your medicine, schedule refills, and renew prescriptions. This organization offers schedules of medications and dosage amounts for yourself and family members. This eliminates the need to take your pill bottles to medical appointments.”