h a l f b a k e r yRight twice a day.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
I just saw a link on BoingBoing about GlowCaps (Linky) - Pill bottle tops with wireless indicators which remind you, and it made me think of a simpler solution: A simple QR code on the side of the pill bottle with dossage instructions encoded on it, and a normal smart-phone (capable of reminding the
user and messaging results.
When you pick up a bottle of pills from the chemist, you scan the bottle's QR code with a little app that processes the dosage instructions into phone alarm reminders, reminders to re-order pills etc.
Whenever the user is reminded to take a pill, all they do when they receive a reminder alram/text is rescan the bottle (to confirm they've taken the medication ) the app checks that they're taking the right pill, at the right time, and reports/alerts on mistakes.
Boing Boing: Harnessing the power of feedback loops
http://www.boingboi...sing-the-power.html GlowCaps [Dub, Jul 08 2011]
Pill Pall
Pill_20Pal [theircompetitor, Jul 08 2011]
For [po]
http://www.micromed...ucts/clinicalxpert/ [mouseposture, Jul 08 2011]
QR Code Specification
http://www.denso-wa...e/qrstandard-e.html Up to 300 characters can be stored/retrieved reliably (and codes can be combined for more information) [Dub, Jul 09 2011]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
|
I love this! (+)
Though it has a mismatched target audience. I think
the majority of the pill takers are not smart phone
users, but it is certainly at least halfbaked. |
|
|
Conveniently the voices tell me to take my meds when I've forgotten. |
|
|
//Conveniently the voices tell me to take my meds
when I've forgotten.//
Though that only works if the voices are not trying to
kill you. |
|
|
hah [dub] I can actually hear you describing this... spent too many hours chatting I fear. |
|
|
nah, here's to many more hours. |
|
|
actually what I'd like is an app that matches all your pills to make sure they all are appropriate together - po' pharmacists - dad would be spinning in his plot. |
|
|
//an app that matches all your pills to make sure
they all are appropriate together // AKA drug
interaction database. e.g. <link>. It's for PDAs.
but there's
also a web-based version, i.e. you could access it
with a browser-equipped cellphone. |
|
|
Probably expensive, though: these folks make a
profit by charging for access to their intellectual
property, and their usual customers have deep
pockets. |
|
|
But pharmacists already have these databases, as
do
medical practices big enough to do electronic
prescribing. |
|
|
[po] yup, it could do that too.
I was imagining a phone could do most of what the cap described on the BB link could do, and more...
|
|
|
I just saw the next comment [mouseposture]... It could do it whether or not the prescriptions are running concurrently as a double
check... Well it couldn't do any harm, could it? |
|
|
[Dub] There's at least one situation in which your
system would work better than the one I linked.
Suppose someone had "as needed"("PRN")
prescriptions for several pain medications,
including some "combination" meds containing
acetaminophen. The prescriptions would specify
a maximum dose per day for each, but wouldn't
stop you ODing on acetaminophen by taking a a
combination of (permitted doses of) Percocet,
Darvocet[1], and Tylenol Number 3 for example[2]
Might be other examples. |
|
|
[1] Not that you can get Darvocet anymore, but
you get the idea.
[2] But something's already seriously wrong if
you've got a collection of prescriptions like that. |
|
| |