This guide explains how to use Medical Diary from the first profile to timeline review, reminders, charts, print, and CSV export.
Before you start
Medical Diary is designed to keep what you observe over time in one place: symptoms, measurements, visits, checkups, and daily health notes. It does not replace Medicine List: that app helps with medicines, doses, and treatments, while Medical Diary builds a clear timeline of what happened and when. Use it as a private log that helps you remember details more clearly, not as a medical decision system.
Why Medical Diary exists
Everyday health often leaves small traces that are hard to reconstruct later: a symptom that comes back, an unusual measurement, a scheduled visit, a quick note, or a question you wanted to ask. Medical Diary keeps these light but important details in order.
The goal is not to turn OneKitPlus into a complex clinical archive. The goal is practical: one simple, private, fast place to record what happened, when it happened, and who it belongs to.
Who it can help
You can use it for yourself, a family member, a child, an older relative, or any situation where memory alone is not enough. It helps when you want to see whether something repeats, remember home measurements, or prepare better for a visit.
Step by step
- Open the app and create a profile for the person you want to track.
- Add an entry and choose note, symptom, measurement, visit, or checkup.
- Fill in date, title, useful details and, when needed, symptom severity or numeric values.
- Add a reminder when you want to remember a visit, measurement, or routine check.
- Use filters, timeline, charts, print, and CSV export when you want to review the history.
1. Create profiles
Create one profile for each person you want to track. Separate profiles avoid confusion and make later filtering much easier. Use simple, recognizable names: the goal is a clear and fast diary, not a complicated form.
2. Choose the right entry type
When you add an entry, choose whether it is a note, symptom, measurement, visit, or checkup. This makes the history easier to filter. For symptoms, you can add severity and details, while measurements can store numeric values.
3. Use reminders, filters, and history
Reminders help you remember visits, periodic checks, or measurements you want to repeat. Filters help you review one person, one entry type, or one date range. The history becomes useful when you want to understand whether something was isolated or repeated.
Useful features
- separate profiles for you and family members
- diary entries for notes, symptoms, measurements, visits, and checkups
- values such as blood pressure, temperature, weight, glucose, oxygen, and heart rate
- recurring reminders and a history of key events
- simple charts, printable reports, and CSV export
Everyday usage examples
- after dinner, record blood pressure and a short note about how you feel
- before an appointment, add the questions you do not want to forget
- during a week with fever, track temperature and symptoms
- after a checkup, save the visit date and important notes
- at the end of the month, filter the history and print the most relevant entries
Good habits
Use short titles, keep dates accurate, write notes in simple language, and add tags when you want to find entries later. For measurements, always use the same unit when possible so the chart remains easy to read.
If you use Medicine List too, use it for medicines and treatments, then use Medical Diary for observations, symptoms, values, visits, and questions you want to remember.
Privacy and control
Each entry stays connected to your OneKitPlus account. The app is designed as a personal log, not a social space, not a public record, and not an automatic diagnosis tool. You decide what is useful to save and keep it as simple as you want.
Review and export
The timeline is the main place to review what happened. Filters help narrow the history by person, type, measurement, or date range. The print action creates a readable report from the current view, and CSV export gives you a simple external copy.
The goal is simple: when something happens, you can add it quickly and keep it connected to the right person, date, and context. Over time, the app becomes a readable history instead of scattered notes, screenshots, or messages.
It is useful for everyday tracking, temporary situations, recurring measurements, and notes you may want to review before an appointment. It remains a personal organization tool only and does not provide medical advice or diagnosis.
Important note
Medical Diary is a personal organization tool. It does not interpret data, suggest diagnoses, or replace medical advice. Its value is helping you remember better and present information in a more organized way.