I made an app for this on Palm OS back in the day. I was advised to have a non-disclaimer basically saying "no one should use this app" for liability reasons. I originally wrote it cause my wife was having trouble remembering anti-biotic schedules for the babies.
People were using it and loved it but the emails that I would get for questions, support or just saying "thanks" were so full of TMI I eventually gave it up and took it down.
I wouldn't be so sure... you need to be really careful, especially if you're in the US. HIPAA can be tricky to navigate. I doubt your TOS will trump HIPAA in court.
I'd be very, very wary of storing any sort of patient information on my own server (e.g., what medications people take, mapped back to identities of patients).
This is pure speculation, but unless you designed your backend to be HIPAA compliant, I'd imagine you may be very liable.
I say all of this as a former medical imaging software engineer who dealt with many HIPAA compliance issues.
It's an interesting idea, but why would I use this over an app for my phone (pretty much any smartphone or an iPod touch) when the app is free or $0.99 one time. A quick search brings up an app by Drugs.com, for example. Are there any compelling features that would justify $8 a month? And if so, you need to make sure people know about these features.
Back in 2009, I designed the same thing. I've had trouble with people staying around for free, never mind the monthly fee. Then again, the trouble could've been with me rather than with the idea. Good luck.
I don't understand the need for this. I'm still using a Palm LifeDrive. Sometimes I have to take a med. Right now I have to med cats. I simply add an alarmed event to my Calendar. Wouldn't anyone with an iPhone or other smartphone be able to do that too?
"Do you know that forgetting to take your pills can be unhealthy?" - seems a little condescending. If they didn't know that, why would they take them at all!? Also, as mentioned previously on HN, it'd definitely help if the Signup page was served over HTTPS. I know that payments made via Stripe are encrypted anyway, but I wouldn't have thought that the average user signing up to a "remember to take your pills" service would.
This does not solve the biggest problem with taking meds -- did I or did I not take that pill that I need to live but can't afford to risk an overdose of?
This is pretty good for software. If anyone is interested in considering "the" solution to this problem in hardware, which involves a patent, please email me:
1) some proof that you have been involved in the successful monetization of a patented physical device in the past,
Signup pages (most definitely ones where the user is prompted to enter credit card information) should have SSL. I've trained my mother to look for the green bar. :)
Thanks for the feedback! I will definitely be adding SSL very soon. The tough thing for me to figure out is if a $7 SSL Cert. has any differences in quality when compared to a $200 SSL Cert.
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 30.0 ms ] threadPeople were using it and loved it but the emails that I would get for questions, support or just saying "thanks" were so full of TMI I eventually gave it up and took it down.
I'd be very, very wary of storing any sort of patient information on my own server (e.g., what medications people take, mapped back to identities of patients).
This is pure speculation, but unless you designed your backend to be HIPAA compliant, I'd imagine you may be very liable.
I say all of this as a former medical imaging software engineer who dealt with many HIPAA compliance issues.
1) some proof that you have been involved in the successful monetization of a patented physical device in the past,
2) mention : "I hereby agree to the NDA located here http://www.yourfreelegalforms.com/item_1099/Non-Disclosure-A... as regards A SMALL PHYSICAL DEVICE INTENDED TO ACT AS A REMINDER TO TAKE MEDICATION" or words to that effect
3) your contact information and requirements
Please contact me at: yctechmgr@gmail.com and I will reply with a full brief.
You're using Heroku, it's quite simple to set-up: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/ssl
In this case, it's literally whether or not the bar will be green with your name in it.
Standard Example: https://limitless-atoll-7423.herokuapp.com/
EV Example: https://simple.com