Appointment-preparation resource: how to track pain for doctors
Not every useful health tool needs provider integration.
Sometimes the lower-friction path is simpler:
If you want privacy-first, offline health tech to exist without surveillance funding it: sponsor the build → https://github.com/sponsors/CrisisCore-Systems
the patient tracks privately.
The patient generates a summary.
The patient decides whether to bring it to the appointment.
Health software often gets pulled toward integration too early. Portals, dashboards, provider accounts, EHR workflows, shared access, admin panels.
Those may be useful later. They also create friction, liability, procurement, privacy review, and operational burden.
PainTracker starts with a smaller model:
patient-controlled tracking, patient-controlled export, and provider access only when the patient chooses to share.
The integration trap
Provider integration sounds powerful.
It also creates hard questions:
- Who owns the data?
- Who monitors it?
- Who is responsible for missed alerts?
- Who manages access?
- Who supports the user?
- What happens when data is wrong?
- What system does it connect to?
- What happens when the integration fails?
For an early patient-support tool, that can be too heavy.
It can also shift the product away from user control before the basic report format has proven useful.
The lower-friction model
A simpler model looks like this:
Patient uses tool independently
Patient records pain context
Patient generates summary
Patient reviews it
Patient chooses whether to share
Clinician reviews as patient-provided context
That model does not require the clinic to adopt a new system.
It does not require the patient to grant live access.
It does not create a monitoring relationship.
It starts with a document.
What the report can include
A patient-generated pain report can include:
- date range
- pain severity trends
- pain locations
- triggers
- functional impact
- medication notes
- sleep disruption
- flare notes
- appointment questions
The goal is not to overwhelm the clinician.
The goal is to reduce the amount of scattered memory the patient has to reconstruct in a short appointment window.
What the report should not pretend to be
A patient-generated report is not:
- a medical record
- a diagnosis
- a clinical decision tool
- a provider-monitored dashboard
- an emergency alert system
- a substitute for assessment
This needs to be explicit.
The report can be useful context without pretending to carry clinical authority.
That boundary makes the tool more credible, not less.
Why this may help appointments
Careful wording matters here.
A clearer patient-generated summary may help the conversation start from better context.
That is different from saying it improves outcomes, reduces appointment time, or increases treatment accuracy.
The honest claim is narrower:
patients often arrive with forgotten details, scattered notes, vague timelines, unclear triggers, and difficulty explaining functional impact.
A structured report may reduce some of that confusion.
Why providers may care
Clinicians and rehab teams already receive patient-provided context in many forms: handwritten notes, calendars, screenshots, phone memos, spreadsheets, forms, and memory.
A readable summary can be easier to skim than fragments.
It also avoids the operational burden of a new portal.
The provider can review it as patient-provided context and decide how much weight it deserves.
Why patients may care
Patients keep control.
No automatic sharing.
No forced account for core tracking.
No provider portal required.
No employer access.
No insurer access.
No hidden pipeline.
That does not make the report risk-free. Once exported, it can be forwarded, uploaded, printed, or stored elsewhere.
That is why the export decision should belong to the user.
Suggested review model
If a clinic or rehab team wanted to evaluate this kind of report, the first review does not need to be a formal integration project.
A low-burden model could be:
5 to 10 interested patients
30 days of voluntary use
No integration
Optional feedback on report clarity
Stop if not useful
That kind of review asks a practical question before an institutional one:
is the summary clear enough to be worth reading?
The useful takeaway
Patient-generated reports can support appointment preparation without turning the app into a clinic system.
That matters because the smallest useful model may also be the safest first model.
I am looking for practical feedback from clinicians, rehab teams, occupational health people, and developers building patient-support tools.
The question is not "should this replace clinical systems?"
The question is simpler:
would this kind of patient-generated report be clear enough to help appointment preparation?
Support this work
- Sponsor the project (primary): https://github.com/sponsors/CrisisCore-Systems
- Star the repo (secondary): https://github.com/CrisisCore-Systems/pain-tracker
Top comments (0)