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Taking My Pills on Time
My medication alarm system combines a very low tech device—a four chamber pill box—with my iPhone’s system alarms. I set a daily repeating alarm labelled with the pill chamber number.
The key innovation is that, instead of a built-in alarm, I use a song. Sometimes it takes me a while to reach my pillbox—the length of the song doesn’t let the task slip from my mind. (It also is less annoying than a repetitive ding dong!) If I don’t snooze the song, iOS repeats it at least three times — fifteen minutes of "Take your pills, already!"
I choose instrumental songs, so as not to impose my lyric tastes on random strangers. I switch to different songs every season, since I can become ear blind to the same tune after too many repetitions.
My pharmacy sold me this 85 cm x 35 cm x 25 cm4-chamber pillbox in rigid plastic. Each chamber has a hinged lid, labelled in braille. There’s a lock on the end that my arthritic fingers have no trouble releasing.
And of course there’s one more set of pills I have to take as I climb in to bed—that pillbox rests on my phone charger, which so far has been a foolproof reminder since I don’t want my baby brain to go unfed overnight.
What's your system like?
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And now I have an image of a friendly radio
When I'm on vacation
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I checked out the iOS Health app
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Wow
Re: Wow
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Up until now I've gotten away with a pair of 7-compartment pill sorters, for morning and night-time. Now that I have four 250mg pills that have to be taken an hour before a meal, a 5mg one to be taken with food, and a set of exercises to do, it's gotten more complicated. I'll probably need to set up a checklist of some sort.
Best of luck!
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Little tins are so lovely
Re: Little tins are so lovely
Re: Little tins are so lovely
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That double-edged
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1. Take pill #1
2. Take pill #2
3. Become distracted by some thought of something I need to do today, or by spots on the faucet, or indeed by anything at all
4. Stare at pill bottle number 2 and wonder if I actually took it, or whether I'm remembering yesterday...
And considering there are actually pill bottles 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, I have many chances to become distracted. The only thing that has helped so far is to do "mise en place" -- when I start taking pills, I take them all out of the cabinet. As I take the pill I put the bottle away. If the bottle is still out I have not taken it yet.
I use a similar mise en place
Re: I use a similar mise en place
Re: I use a similar mise en place
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I have a pill case with a smaller interior case for each day with two slots. It lives right in front of my keyboard, so it's always handy. When I'm in the office, I pop that day's case out and bring it with me (since I take the pills when I eat breakfast, which I do in the office.)
The first thing in the morning pills are a) tiny and b) my thyroid pills. They live in a separate case with an old-fashioned patent medicine style label that reads "Zombie Cure" with some other text, which makes me crack up every time I see it. (Because when my thyroid is not suitably medicated, that's certainly what I feel like.)
The injection has to live in the fridge until I take it (or a couple of hours before) so I grab it when Ihave dinner on Friday and it sits in the corner of my desk until bedtime.
I use Round on my phone for a reminder, which I like because it will do multiple reminders over a given time period if you want.
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Traveling
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I label the alarm "pills & garage door" as my garage is my potting shed as well and I need to remember to close it at dusk as it connects to the flat. All this is easier for me as I only have once a day meds (2 of them) and the rest are supplements I choose to take.
Those are adorable!
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The weekly case gets pills divided into: before/with breakfast; after breakfast & very after-breakfast; before/with dinner; and finally after dinner. I fill it out of a stack of AM/PM weekly cases that I keep in my desk drawer and load once every month or three. (I write the dates on those cases in grease pencil, so I can make alterations for upcoming appointments if necessary, like taking out the baby aspirin before anything that involves an incision.)
On my phone I use the Medisafe app, which I have programmed to ask me "Do you know where your pillbox is?" and make a pill-rattling noise at me. The prompts repeat every 15 minutes for 10 attempts, until I mark the thing taken or skipped.
It lets me mark a med as discontinued and will stop reminding me until I mark it as active again, which is good for the meds that I use for chemo side effects. It also lets me log doses of various meds that I don't take on any particular schedule. It lets me define custom meds as well as things it has in its database; I have "morning pills 1", "morning pills 2" and so forth for certain groups of meds that don't need separate enumeration, which I also like for privacy reasons. It also reminds me about my physical therapy.
I might possibly be back to a meds point where I could go back to a few alarms, but I like having the confirmation that yes, I did mark such and such a med as taken at such and such a time.
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Nighttime meds, I take them when I brush my teeth before I go to bed.
Mid day meds are something I try to avoid.
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I'm using the iOS reminders for my rotating cast of topicals (I've got one that's daily, one that's 2x/week, another different one that's 2x/week...). I can remember I need a topical as part of my bedtime routine but not which ones, so the reminders show me WTF I'm supposed to be using, because I can't put goo in a pill box.
Okay now I'm imagining