Medication Tracker
Medication Tracker — Stay Consistent With Your Prescriptions
Introduction:
Taking medication consistently sounds simple in theory, but in practice it’s one of the most common challenges in healthcare. Doses get missed during busy mornings, refills get forgotten until the bottle is empty, and after a few weeks on multiple medications, it becomes genuinely hard to remember what you’ve taken and when.
The MyHealthChart Medication Tracker is built to take that mental load off your plate. In one place, you can organize every prescription you’re on, set specific reminder times for each dose, log when you’ve actually taken something, and watch your pill supply count down in real time — so you always know what’s due, what’s running low, and what you’ve already taken today.
This tool is designed as a practical daily companion for managing routines, not a substitute for the instructions on your prescription label or your doctor’s guidance.
How to Use the Medication Tracker:
The tool is organized into four tabs, each handling a different part of staying consistent:
Add Medication:
- Enter the medication name exactly as written on your prescription (for example, “Metformin”).
- Enter the dosage (for example, “500mg”).
- Select how often you take it — once, twice, three, or four times daily.
- Set your reminder times — the tool starts with two time slots you can adjust, and you can click “+ Add Time” to add more if needed.
- Enter your total pills in stock and pills per dose — this is what powers the inventory tracking.
- Click “Save Medication” — it’s instantly added to your daily reminders.
Today’s Reminders:
This tab shows every dose due today, across all your medications, sorted by time. Each card shows the medication, dosage, how many pills remain, and the scheduled time. As the day goes on, doses that pass their scheduled time without being marked will automatically flip to an “Overdue” status. When you take a dose, simply click “Mark Taken” — it updates instantly and deducts the right number of pills from your inventory.
My Medications:
This tab gives you a full overview of everything you’re tracking, including a visual inventory bar for each medication that shows exactly how much supply is left. The bar changes color as your supply runs low, helping you spot refill needs before you actually run out.
Dosage History:
Every dose you mark as taken is logged here, showing the medication, dosage, scheduled time, and the actual time you logged it — building a simple record of your adherence over the course of your session.
The Method Behind the Tracking:
The tracker uses straightforward, transparent logic rather than anything hidden:
Reminder Status Logic:
- A dose shows as upcoming (blue) if its scheduled time hasn’t passed yet.
- A dose shows as Overdue (red) if the scheduled time has passed and it hasn’t been marked taken.
- A dose shows as Taken (faded, green badge) once you’ve confirmed it.
Inventory Calculation:
Each time you mark a dose as taken, the tool subtracts your specified “pills per dose” from your total remaining count:
Remaining Pills = Total Pills − (Pills per Dose × Doses Taken)
The inventory bar reflects this percentage visually, shifting from green to yellow to red as your supply approaches zero — giving you a visual early warning before you’re left without medication.
History Logging:
Every confirmed dose is added to a running list with both its scheduled time and the actual time it was logged, so you can see not just whether you took something, but how closely you stuck to your intended schedule.
Tips for Getting the Most Out of This Tool:
- Set realistic reminder times that match your actual daily routine — for example, aligning doses with meals if your medication should be taken with food.
- Update your “pills per dose” accurately if you ever take more than one pill per dose, so your inventory count stays accurate.
- Check “My Medications” regularly, not just when a reminder pops up — the inventory bar is your early warning system for refills, and catching a low supply a week early is much easier than scrambling the night before you run out.
- Use the Dosage History tab honestly. If you miss a dose, that’s useful information too — patterns of missed doses (like always missing the evening dose) can help you and your doctor adjust timing or formulation.
- Remember this resets each session. Since no account or login is required, your data here is temporary — for a permanent record, consider also noting doses in a physical pillbox or a dedicated medication app that saves data long-term.
- Never adjust your dosage or schedule based on this tool alone. It’s an organizational aid for the schedule your doctor or pharmacist has already given you, not a tool for deciding what or how much to take.
Reading Your Tracker & Status Guide:
🔵 Upcoming
A dose that hasn’t reached its scheduled time yet. No action needed until the time arrives.
🔴 Overdue
A dose whose scheduled time has passed without being marked taken. If you’ve actually taken it, mark it now to keep your inventory accurate. If you genuinely missed it, this is a useful prompt to take it as soon as it’s safe to do so, or to check your medication’s specific guidance on missed doses.
🟢 Taken
A confirmed dose for today, shown with a faded card and a “Taken” badge so your reminder list stays clear and uncluttered.
Inventory Bar Colors:
Inventory Bar Colors:
- 🟢 Green — healthy supply remaining
- 🟡 Yellow — supply getting low, good time to think about a refill
- 🔴 Red — supply critically low, refill as soon as possible to avoid an interruption in your medication routine
Important Limitations to Keep in Mind
This tool is an organizational aid, not a medical device or pharmacy system. It does not send real push notifications or alerts to your phone, does not verify drug interactions or dosing safety, and does not save your data between sessions — everything resets once you leave or reload the page.
It’s intended to help you stay organized within the prescription plan your doctor or pharmacist has already provided — not to make decisions about what medications to take, in what amounts, or on what schedule. Always follow the instructions on your prescription label, and contact your doctor or pharmacist directly with any questions about missed doses, side effects, or changes to your medication routine.
Frequently Asked Questions:
1. Does MyHealthchart save my medication list after I close the page?
No. The MyHealthChart Medication Tracker is a live session tool — your medications, reminders, and history are fully active while you’re on the page, but everything resets if you reload or close it. No account or login is required, and nothing is stored afterward.
2. Does MyHealthChart send real reminder notifications to my phone?
No. The My HealthChart Medication Tracker organizes your reminder times visually on the page and flags overdue doses while you’re actively using the tool, but it does not send push notifications, texts, or alerts outside the browser.
3. How does MyHealthChart calculate how many pills I have left?
MyHealthChart subtracts your specified “pills per dose” from your total stock every time you mark a dose as taken. The inventory bar shown in “My Medications” reflects this calculation visually, turning yellow and then red as your supply runs low.
4. Can I track medications I take more than four times a day on MyHealthChart?
The frequency dropdown on MyHealthChart offers up to four times daily, but you can add as many individual reminder times as you need using the “+ Add Time” button when setting up a medication, regardless of the frequency selected.
5. What should I do if MyHealthChart shows a dose as "Overdue"?
If MyHealthChart marks a dose as Overdue, check whether you’ve actually taken it — if so, mark it taken to keep your records accurate. If you missed it, follow your medication’s specific guidance on missed doses, or contact your pharmacist or doctor if you’re unsure.
6. Can MyHealthChart tell me if my medications interact with each other?
No. The MyHealthChart Medication Tracker is an organizational tool for reminders and inventory, not a drug interaction checker. Always consult your pharmacist or doctor about potential interactions between your medications.