is coming soon!
What is ?
• A cloud-based secure medication list
• HIPAA-compliant: no individually identifiable
PHI collected or stored on the server
• Lightweight and platform agnostic: easy to
integrate with other health services
• The “anti-app” for 50+ patients: end user can
interact almost entirely with printed med chart
• Focused on usability and design: built to have
a low learning curve for patients and providers
Med Chart
Furosemide 20
Simvastatin 40
Lisinopril 10
Med Chart
Furosemide 20
Simvastatin 40
Lisinopril 10
Losartan 50
Med Chart
Furosemide 20
Simvastatin 40
Losartan 50
Aspirin 325
Melatonin 5
DischargeReadmission
Hospital EHR
Patient
SNF / Nursing HomePCP Office
Pharmacy
Transition of careHospitalization
Continuum of care
Comparison
With Current System With Chart My Meds
Medication
reconciliation
Based on patient memory,
handwritten lists, and
pharmacy calls.
Jump-started with reliable printed
or computer-accessible chart of
medications.
Discharge
medication list
Omitted or incorrect in 20%
of discharge summaries1, not
consistent between
providers, overwhelming
amount of information for
patients.
Can be built into EHR system and
automated to provide a
consistently formatted list across
all providers which is easily
understandable and usable by
patients.
Personal
medication list
Usually handwritten lists or
Word documents printed
out. Many apps available to
make medication lists, but
most are information silos.
Dynamic paper and digital list of
medications. Lightweight, platform
agnostic med chart that can easily
be shared among providers and be
integrated into EHRs.
1 Kind, A. J. & Smith, M. A. (2008). Advances in Patient Safety: New Directions and Alternative Approaches (Vol. 2:
Culture and Redesign). Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
What are we looking for?
• A site interested in using our medication chart
solution for any number of things
– Inpatient hospital: automated discharge
medication list for increasing health outcomes
– Community pharmacy: tool for facilitating
medication therapy management (MTM)
– Physician office: personal health record (PHR) for
improving patient medication adherence

Chart My Meds

  • 1.
  • 2.
    What is ? •A cloud-based secure medication list • HIPAA-compliant: no individually identifiable PHI collected or stored on the server • Lightweight and platform agnostic: easy to integrate with other health services • The “anti-app” for 50+ patients: end user can interact almost entirely with printed med chart • Focused on usability and design: built to have a low learning curve for patients and providers
  • 3.
    Med Chart Furosemide 20 Simvastatin40 Lisinopril 10 Med Chart Furosemide 20 Simvastatin 40 Lisinopril 10 Losartan 50 Med Chart Furosemide 20 Simvastatin 40 Losartan 50 Aspirin 325 Melatonin 5 DischargeReadmission Hospital EHR Patient SNF / Nursing HomePCP Office Pharmacy Transition of careHospitalization Continuum of care
  • 4.
    Comparison With Current SystemWith Chart My Meds Medication reconciliation Based on patient memory, handwritten lists, and pharmacy calls. Jump-started with reliable printed or computer-accessible chart of medications. Discharge medication list Omitted or incorrect in 20% of discharge summaries1, not consistent between providers, overwhelming amount of information for patients. Can be built into EHR system and automated to provide a consistently formatted list across all providers which is easily understandable and usable by patients. Personal medication list Usually handwritten lists or Word documents printed out. Many apps available to make medication lists, but most are information silos. Dynamic paper and digital list of medications. Lightweight, platform agnostic med chart that can easily be shared among providers and be integrated into EHRs. 1 Kind, A. J. & Smith, M. A. (2008). Advances in Patient Safety: New Directions and Alternative Approaches (Vol. 2: Culture and Redesign). Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
  • 5.
    What are welooking for? • A site interested in using our medication chart solution for any number of things – Inpatient hospital: automated discharge medication list for increasing health outcomes – Community pharmacy: tool for facilitating medication therapy management (MTM) – Physician office: personal health record (PHR) for improving patient medication adherence