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.
Not every GLP-1 app needs to be a lifestyle app
Many GLP-1 apps expand into food logging, weight charts, coaching, reports, reminders, community features, and AI assistants. Some users want that. Others just want a clean medication record.
Dosie should be built for the second group: people who already have a protocol and want to know what they logged, which vial it came from, where they applied, and what they noticed later.
That narrower position is not a weakness. It makes the product easier to understand and easier to trust because the user is not asked to adopt a full lifestyle system just to keep a medication history.
The private record is the product
A private GLP-1 tracker can be valuable without predicting levels, interpreting symptoms, or recommending protocol changes.
The highest-trust version of the product keeps the record fast, correctable, and easy to review. That means the product should put the log, vial, site, and symptom history near the front instead of hiding it behind coaching features.
This also keeps the marketing honest. The public promise can be simple: Dosie helps you organize your own record. It does not decide your treatment plan.
What the narrow tracker should include
A narrow GLP-1 tracker should focus on the repeated recordkeeping moments that happen around a dose. The user should be able to capture the event quickly and review it later without building a spreadsheet system.
The exact fields may change as the product matures, but the public SEO page should stay focused on factual records.
- Dose log history
- Vial context
- Application site history
- Symptom notes
- User-entered cadence status
- Clear safety boundary copy
Why no food logging can be a feature
Food logging is useful for some products, but it changes the job of the app. It asks the user to maintain a nutrition diary, interpret patterns, and sometimes accept coaching around eating behavior.
Dosie does not need that surface to rank for GLP-1 tracker intent. A user searching for medication history, dose log, or injection site tracking may not want nutrition software at all.
Why no AI advice can be a feature
An AI assistant can make a health-adjacent product feel powerful, but it can also blur the line between recordkeeping and advice. For this product, the safer and clearer V1 is a private tracker with no protocol optimization.
That does not make the product less useful. It makes the product more specific. Dosie can be the place where users keep their record, not the place where they ask what to do next.
Why this matters for search
People search for GLP-1 tracker, semaglutide tracker, tirzepatide tracker, Ozempic tracker, Mounjaro tracker, Zepbound tracker, dose log, injection site log, and vial tracker because they are trying to remember something concrete.
Long-form blog content should answer that recordkeeping intent directly instead of drifting into medical advice. The strongest articles explain how to keep a clean record, what fields matter, and how Dosie stays intentionally narrow.
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.