Known, unknown, and estimated
- Known: the schedule and event status recorded in the app.
- Unknown: whether a dismissed notification means an event occurred.
- Estimate: adherence summaries depend on complete and accurate event status.
The competitive landscape
The live United States Google results for “injection reminder app” are dominated by broad medication products such as MyTherapy and Medisafe, app listings, and publisher roundups. Halflife should not claim to be the best general medication reminder. Its defensible niche is connecting per-compound reminders with injection sites, supplies, schedules, and protocol history.
A reminder workflow with useful states
Scheduled
The plan exists, but completion has not been established.
Completed
The actual event record contains time, amount, unit, route, and context.
Delayed or skipped
The record preserves what differed from the plan.
Corrected
A change is traceable without silently rewriting history.
What reminders should not do
A consumer reminder should not invent a schedule, interpret a missed event, or advise a user to take an injection. Prescribing information and a qualified clinician govern those decisions. The app organizes the schedule the user has chosen to record.
Why a generic reminder may still be the better fit
Someone managing many prescription forms, refill workflows, caregiver alerts, or pharmacy integrations may be better served by a broad medication reminder. Halflife is a stronger fit when injection and multi-compound protocol context are the central records.
Product source: Halflife App Store listing.
Keep the complete record in one place
Halflife - Peptide & GLP-1 Log organizes logs, schedules, vial inventory, injection sites, symptoms, and clearly labeled model estimates on iPhone.
Download Halflife - Peptide & GLP-1 Log