Recordkeeping boundary
Dosie is a private recordkeeping app. It does not provide diagnosis, treatment recommendations, dosing instructions, interaction advice, stack advice, protocol optimization, or emergency guidance.
They solve different problems
A medication reminder asks what should happen next. A dose log records what actually happened. Those are related jobs, but they are not the same job.
For many GLP-1 and peptide users, the immediate problem is not building a full planner. It is knowing what was logged last, which vial was used, where the application happened, and what context was saved with the entry.
That is why a product can be valuable even before it offers reminders. A clean history is its own workflow.
Reminder apps are future-facing
Reminder apps are designed around prompts, schedules, notifications, and adherence workflows. They can be useful when a user needs a nudge at a specific time.
But reminders can also imply that the app knows what should happen. For a health-adjacent V1, that creates a larger safety and compliance surface than a factual log.
Dose logs are history-facing
A dose log is simpler. It answers questions about the past: what did I enter, when did I enter it, what vial did I choose, and what site or notes did I attach?
That makes the product easier to position. Dosie does not need to decide what is due. It can show the user-entered record and keep the boundary clear.
- Last logged dose
- Medication or peptide label
- Amount and unit from the user
- Vial context
- Application site
- Symptom or note context
Cadence status is not the same as advice
A tracker may show status from a user-entered cadence, but that is different from recommending a schedule. The source of truth is the user's own entry, not a personalized medical instruction generated by the app.
Public copy should make that distinction visible. Say user-entered cadence, logged history, and record review. Avoid language that sounds like the app is deciding when the next medication event should happen.
Why Dosie starts with the record
For many protocols, the first need is a reliable way to record the last dose and correct it later. A reminder can come after the underlying record is trustworthy.
That is why Dosie prioritizes dose logs, vials, sites, and symptom context before reminder features.
The SEO angle
Searchers comparing dose logs and medication reminders are often trying to understand which category fits their use case. A direct article can rank by explaining the difference plainly.
The article should not attack reminder apps. It should clarify that Dosie is intentionally history-first: a private recordkeeping product, not a dosing instruction system.
FAQ
Does Dosie tell me what dose to take?
No. Dosie records the information you enter. It does not recommend doses, medications, timing, stacks, or protocol changes.
Is this medical advice?
No. Dosie is a tracking and organization product for people who already have a protocol. Always use qualified professional guidance for medical decisions.
Where is calculator data stored?
The calculator runs in your browser. It does not require an account or save records to a Dosie server.