Walk into your appointment organized
A typical doctor’s visit is short. Many primary-care appointments run about 15
to 20 minutes, and a lot of that time goes to the parts only your clinician can
do. The minutes you can control are the ones before you walk in — when you
decide what to bring and what to ask.
First, the part that matters most here: everything you type stays on your
device. Nothing is sent to a server, there is no account, and there are no
ads. When you are done, you can clear it. We don’t run analytics on these pages
either — the things you log here are nobody’s business but yours and your care
team’s.
These five tools help you do exactly that. They turn the scattered facts of your
health — the pills in your cabinet, the readings on your monitor, the symptoms
you keep meaning to mention — into a clean page you can hand across the desk.
None of them is a medical record, a diagnosis, or a substitute for your
clinician’s judgment. They are organizational aids. Think of them as the way you
get your own information in order, so the short visit goes further.
Start with what you take
The single most useful thing most people can bring to an appointment is an
accurate, current list of their medications — including the things that don’t
feel like “medications.” The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s guidance on
keeping a medicine record is explicit about this: list prescriptions and
over-the-counter products, vitamins, and supplements, because all of them can
interact. Clinicians sometimes call the in-office version of this a “brown-bag
review,” and a written list saves everyone the guesswork.
The Medication List builds that page
for you. For each medicine you capture the name, the strength, what it’s for, and
the instructions (when, how, and how much) — the core fields the FDA and AHRQ
templates ask for — plus optional columns for the prescriber, start and stop
dates, the next refill, and a plain physical description (“small white oval”),
which helps a caregiver tell loose pills apart. You can mark up to six medicines
as wallet-card priorities, and the tool prints a separate wallet card sized
to a standard ID-1 / CR80 card (the same footprint as a credit card) to carry
for emergencies. It works in English and US Spanish.
A current med list is the foundation the rest of this prep sits on. Build it
once, keep it on your device, and update it when something changes.
Bring your numbers, not just your memory
For anything that moves day to day — blood pressure, blood sugar, pain — one
reading in the clinic tells a small story. A two-week trend tells a much bigger
one. Home readings also dodge “white-coat” spikes, where being at the doctor’s
office nudges a number up. Three of these tools are logs built to capture
that trend and print it clean.
A quick, honest word on what the colored labels mean. Each log shows a category
band next to your readings so the page is easier to scan. Those bands are
screening labels drawn from national guidelines — not a diagnosis. Only your
clinician can interpret your numbers in the context of your health, your other
conditions, and your medications.
Blood pressure over time
The Blood Pressure Log records
each reading with the date, whether it was morning (AM) or evening (PM), the
systolic and diastolic numbers, and an optional pulse. Standard home guidance is
to take two readings a minute or two apart; if you enter both, the log averages
the pair for its category band. It labels each reading using the American
Heart Association stages: Normal (below 120 and below 80), Elevated (120 to
129 and below 80), Stage 1 (130 to 139 or 80 to 89), Stage 2 (140 or higher,
or 90 or higher), and a flag for the hypertensive-crisis range (above 180
and/or above 120). When you have at least two readings in the last seven days,
it shows a 7-day running average — the kind of summary a clinician can actually
use. It exports to CSV and prints on one page.
Blood sugar by reading type
A glucose number means different things at different times — 150 mg/dL fasting is
high, but the same 150 two hours after a meal is in range. The
Blood Sugar Log handles this by
banding each reading by its type. Using the American Diabetes Association
adult targets, a fasting or pre-meal reading counts as in range at roughly 80 to
130 mg/dL; a reading two hours after a meal is in range under 180 mg/dL. The log
also flags lows at or below 70 mg/dL and very-high readings at or above 250
mg/dL. You can enter values in mg/dL or mmol/L, and it computes a 7-day average
and a simple time-in-range share. These are general adult targets — your personal
goals may differ by your diabetes type, age, pregnancy status, and your
clinician’s plan.
Pain and symptoms, day by day
When a symptom comes and goes, the details blur by the time you’re in the exam
room. The Pain & Symptom Diary
lets you log a symptom, its intensity on the standard 0–10 numeric rating
scale (0 is no pain, 10 is the worst pain imaginable), plus optional location,
how long it lasted, what set it off, and what helped. It bands intensity as none,
mild (1–3), moderate (4–6), or severe (7–10), and rolls up a 7-day average and a
simple tally of which symptoms came up most. That short summary — “headaches
four days this week, worst a 7, usually after screen time” — is far more useful
to a clinician than “I’ve been getting headaches.”
Put it together: the visit checklist
The Doctor Visit Checklist is
the tool that ties the rest together — the one to open last. Pick your visit type
(annual physical, specialist referral, new condition, chronic follow-up, or
pre-surgery) and it seeds starter questions tuned to that visit, a structure
adapted from the federal AHRQ QuestionBuilder taxonomy. You add your own
questions, then check the ones that matter most — and here it does something on
purpose: it caps you at five. A short appointment realistically holds a
handful of real questions, so prioritizing beats listing twenty you’ll never get
to.
It can also pull from your other tools, only if you ask it to. With one tap
it can read your saved medication
list and your last 14 days from the symptom
diary, drop them into the printout, and you can clear them before you print.
The pull is explicit and reversible — the checklist never reaches into your other
tools on its own, and it never writes back to them. Then it prints a clean,
one-page sheet you can hand over or read from.
A simple sequence that covers most visits:
- Build your medication list once. Start with the
Medication List and keep it on
your device. Update it whenever a prescription changes.
- Log the thing that’s moving. In the days before your visit, record the
measure your appointment is about — blood pressure in the
BP log, glucose in the
blood sugar log, or symptoms in
the symptom diary. Aim for at
least a week so the averages mean something.
- Build the visit plan last. Open the
Doctor Visit Checklist,
choose your visit type, pull in your med list and recent symptoms, and pick
your top five questions.
- Print, then go. Walk in with one or two clean pages instead of trying to
remember it all.
You don’t need all five. A chronic-condition follow-up might use the med list,
one trend log, and the checklist. A new-symptom visit might lean on the diary and
the checklist alone. Use what fits the appointment.
A note on privacy and limits
Two honest boundaries, because they matter here.
On your data. These tools compute in your browser and store what you enter in
your device’s local storage. Nothing is uploaded, there is no login, and you can
clear any tool’s data at any time. We don’t store it, but your device does — so if
you share a computer, clear it when you’re done. We also turn analytics off on
these pages, so even page visits aren’t measured the way they are elsewhere on
the site.
On what these are. These are organizational worksheets and estimates to help
you prepare — they are not medical advice, not a diagnosis, and not a medical
record. The AHA and ADA category labels are screening guidance, not a verdict on
your health. Always verify medication names and doses with your pharmacist or
clinician, and seek care promptly for anything severe, sudden, or new — for
example, chest pain, a reading in the hypertensive-crisis range, or any symptom
that frightens you. When in doubt, call your clinician or, in an emergency, 911.