Getting old and would like a better way to track health the self hosted way
from trilobite@lemmy.ml to selfhosted@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 07:27
https://lemmy.ml/post/37426611

We have a lot of health records in the family, often just for monitoring health as we grow older. Is there a good system that allow storing and organising this info. Maybe also allowing notes, reminders?

#selfhosted

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Good_Slate@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 07:33 next collapse

I too am interested in an automated system taking data from things like smart rings/watches, ideally with home assistant integration. Do you mean like basic note taking? something like Joplin could be used for that. I use it extensively. It has a to do checkbox function, which you could use as a reminder, though it doesn’t pop up. You’d have to look at it. I think for reminders etc. you’d perhaps be looking at calendar software, perhaps next cloud, which also includes notes.

[deleted] on 12 Oct 09:20 next collapse
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truthfultemporarily@feddit.org on 12 Oct 10:28 collapse

I’ve seen this haven’t tried it out though

timelinize.com

xxce2AAb@feddit.dk on 12 Oct 07:42 next collapse

Components of GNU Health, perhaps?

There’s this, even

adeoxymus@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 07:46 next collapse

I have no experience with it, but this promises local storage of health records: github.com/fastenhealth/fasten-onprem

tburkhol@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 23:49 collapse

Fetched it. Started it. Did a really nice job fetching my whole health record from insurance co & has a wide array of compatible providers. Decent presentation of repeated test results. It’s got a bunch of areas “not implemented yet,” but it’s a decent way to visualize the records. Probably even better if you have health records from multiple providers.

deprecateddino@lemmy.world on 13 Oct 04:25 collapse

I’ve used it. I like how it can show trends in test results too.

BennyInc@feddit.org on 12 Oct 08:13 next collapse

I haven’t tried it yet, but had a similar question recently and found this: github.com/ikarakas/HealthStash

If you try it out, please leave some comment here on how it worked out. I’m just too busy (okay, procrastinating) to set it up at the moment…

flightyhobler@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 11:17 next collapse

I wish there were screenshots

BennyInc@feddit.org on 12 Oct 11:24 collapse

Yeah, same. Or a demo instance. But if you install and test, you can take some screenshots and contribute to the repo 😉

(Well, so could I… but… some other time)

spacelord@sh.itjust.works on 12 Oct 11:30 next collapse

v0.0.7, i.e. who wants to be a bug catcher 😅

trilobite@lemmy.ml on 12 Oct 12:54 collapse

Looks very interesting. But as others noted, still too young, only two releases in 3 months and 1 person. Certainly to keep an eye out. The MIT licence worries me too. I always add the licence in the criteria ;-)

solrize@lemmy.ml on 12 Oct 08:36 next collapse

Paper notebook for each person, really the simplest, unless you have continuous monitoring or something uploading data automatically. Otherwise, for stuff like weight and BP, the actual measurements are the main hassle and computers won’t save you any time compared to that.

Added: for pills, timercap.com bottle caps are brilliant. They have an LCD display saying how it has been since the cap was last taken off the bottle. It eliminates the problem of forgetting whether you have already taken your pill.

Otherwise, generally, as always: …tumblr.com/…/tech-enthusiasts-everything-in-my-h…

ISOmorph@feddit.org on 12 Oct 09:21 next collapse

I use Track & Graph from F-Droid for a similar purpose. I noticed pretty quickly that the data I want to track just isn’t generic enough to find a tailored app for it. So I setup several reminders through the app to enter the various measurements at set points in time each day and get a nice graph to dislay it.

Elkenders@feddit.uk on 12 Oct 12:35 next collapse

Nextcloud Health?

Edit: Appears not not do the job after a dig. Maybe Gadgetbridge (if you’re pulling in fitness trackers)>Influx?

PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 12:43 next collapse

A friend of mine is building something like that. You scan all the documents and you can set reminders, it does summaries and proposes actions and a buck of other really neat stuff It’s ai. I think it’s a good use case. But the ai means it has to call a server with the information, so I can’t get past that.

trilobite@lemmy.ml on 12 Oct 12:49 next collapse

absolutely, none of that is going past my router.

Passerby6497@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 12:59 collapse

But the ai means it has to call a server with the information, so I can’t get past that.

That just means they need to ship the model and a way to run it locally. I’d love that, and wouldn’t give a shit if it took a long time to run on my hardware for something like that

PixelatedSaturn@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 13:24 collapse

Yeah, that’s true I guess. I’m using ai from protona lot for my complicated medical conditions and it’s helpful, still would be better to have it local. Especially if it had good features.

FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world on 12 Oct 19:27 collapse

You could build your own spreadsheet using LibreOffice Spreadsheets.

I’ve been meaning to do it because my diet doesn’t change much, and it would just be easier to track it myself.